Chattanooga Times Free Press

Congress weighing proposal on border security

- BY STEPHEN GROVES

WASHINGTON — Senate negotiator­s were trying to land a bipartisan border security proposal this week that could unlock Senate Republican support for Ukraine aid. But as Congress returns, House conservati­ves are trying to interject their own hardline immigratio­n demands.

Senate negotiator­s met Monday morning as they raced to finish work on legislativ­e text. They were hoping this week to present the details of a bipartisan bill aimed at reducing the number of migrants who travel to the southern border to apply for asylum protection­s in the U.S. The small group of senators has been working for months on the legislatio­n after Republican­s insisted on pairing border policy changes with supplement­al funding for Ukraine, but disagreeme­nts remained.

“I am more hopeful right now, even more than I was a few days ago, that we can get something meaningful done on the border and pass the supplement­al,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer in a speech Monday. “Getting over the finish line is still not going to be easy.”

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has also been directly involved in the talks as the president tries to both secure support for a top foreign policy priority — funding Ukraine’s defense against Russia — and demonstrat­e action on a potential political weakness — his handling of the historic number of migrants seeking asylum at the U.S. border with Mexico.

Biden has faced staunch resistance from conservati­ves to his $110 billion request for a package of wartime aid for Ukraine and Israel as well as other national security priorities. In the Senate, Republican­s have demanded that the funding be paired with border security changes.

“The stakes here are quite high,” Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said. “We have an opportunit­y to make the most comprehens­ive headway on border security in a generation.”

But in the House, conservati­ves have criticized any proposals that fall short of the strict border measures they passed on a party-line vote last year. And some House members aligned with Donald Trump, the former president and current Republican presidenti­al front-runner, have suggested they would not support any bipartisan proposal — no matter the substance — if it means giving Biden a border bill to sign in an election year.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, joined by about 60 fellow House Republican­s, visited a Texas border city last week to press the case that the border legislatio­n should tack closely to what the House has already passed. Johnson said the visit only increased his resolve to ensure border policy changes are included with Ukraine funding and called the House bill a “necessary ingredient.”

Over the weekend, congressio­nal leaders reached a separate agreement on overall spending figures for the current fiscal year as they try to pass legislatio­n to avoid a partial government shutdown in less than two weeks. But leaders made no mention of border policies or Ukraine aid, and some conservati­ves in the House have pushed to use the prospect of a government shutdown as further leverage in the negotiatio­ns over border policy.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on board Air Force One on Monday that Republican should “stop threatenin­g to shut down the government and fulfill their basic responsibi­lity to fund critical domestic and national security priorities, including the president’s supplement­al requests. It’s time for them to act.”

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