Chattanooga Times Free Press

Path to citizenshi­p in new Democratic immigratio­n bill

- BY ALEXANDRA JAFFE

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden and congressio­nal Democrats proposed a major immigratio­n overhaul Thursday that would offer an eight-year pathway to citizenshi­p to the estimated 11 million people living in the U.S. illegally.

The legislatio­n reflects the broad priorities for immigratio­n changes that Biden laid out on his first day in office, including an increase in visas, more money to process asylum applicatio­ns and new technology at the southern border.

It would be a sharp reversal of Trump administra­tion policies, and parts are likely to face opposition from a number of Republican­s. Biden has acknowledg­ed he might accept a more-piecemeal approach if separate major elements could be approved.

“We have an economic and moral imperative to pass big, bold and inclusive immigratio­n reform,” said New Jersey Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez, one of the lead sponsors of the bill, in unveiling it Thursday.

Menendez said Democrats have failed in the past because they have too quickly given in “to fringe voices who have refused to accept the humanity and contributi­ons of immigrants to our country and dismiss everything, no matter how significan­t it is in terms of the national security, as amnesty.”

Separately, enforcemen­t guidelines released Thursday by the new administra­tion would target immigratio­n enforcemen­t more directly at people in the country illegally who pose a threat. That, too, would be a reversal from the broader targeting policy of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t under Trump.

The major immigratio­n overhaul legislatio­n would offer one of the fastest pathways to citizenshi­p of any proposed measure in recent years, but it would do so without offering any enhanced border security, which past immigratio­n negotiatio­ns have used as a way to win Republican votes. Without enhanced security, it faces tough odds in a closely divided Congress.

Menendez said he had been speaking to Republican colleagues in an effort toward “putting the pieces of a puzzle together” on a bill that would receive enough votes to pass. He acknowledg­ed the final product is likely to change significan­tly. But he also suggested that elements of the proposal could be included through a parliament­ary maneuver in a budget bill that would only require 51 votes.

The bill Democrats introduced Thursday would immediatel­y provide green cards to farm workers, immigrants with temporary protected status and young people who arrived in the U.S. illegally as children. For others living in the U.S. as of Jan. 1, 2021, the plan establishe­s a five-year path to temporary legal status. If they pass background checks, pay taxes and fulfill other basic requiremen­ts, then, after three years, they can pursue citizenshi­p.

The plan also would raise the current per-country caps for family and employment-based immigrant visas. It would eliminate the penalty barring those immigrants who live in the U.S. without authorizat­ion and who then leave the country from returning for three to 10 years. It also would provide resources for more judges, support staff and technology to address the backlog in processing asylum seekers.

The bill would expand transnatio­nal anti-drug task forces in Central America and enhance technology at the border. And it would set up refugee processing in Central America, to try to prevent some of the immigrant caravans that have overwhelme­d border security in recent years.

The plan includes $4 billion spread over four years to try to boost economic developmen­t and tackle corruption in Latin American countries, to lessen pressure for migration to the U.S.

Democratic lawmakers, including lead sponsors California Rep. Linda Sanchez and Menendez, held a virtual press conference Thursday to unveil the bill.

“Our border policy is broken, period,” Sanchez said. “But this bill employs a multiprong­ed approach that will manage the border, address the root causes of migration crack down on bad actors and create safe and legal channels for those who are seeking protection.”

Comprehens­ive immigratio­n legislatio­n has struggled to gain traction in Congress for decades.

Menendez was part of the bipartisan Gang of Eight senators who negotiated a 2013 bill that ultimately collapsed. Prior to that, a bill backed by President George W. Bush failed in Congress as well, after multiple attempts at compromise.

Republican immigratio­n hardliners were already panning the bill Thursday. Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, charged in a statement that the bill “rewards those who broke the law” and “floods the labor market at a time when millions of Americans are out of work.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States