Los Angeles Times

GOP drafts immigratio­n reform plan

- By Brian Bennett and Michael A. Memoli brian.bennett@latimes.com michael.memoli@latimes.com

CAMBRIDGE, Md. — A Republican blueprint for immigratio­n reform offers legalizati­on for some of the nation’s 11 million people who are in the country illegally, but no special pathway to citizenshi­p except in the cases of children brought here by their parents, according to a draft presented Thursday to lawmakers by party leadership.

The much-anticipate­d blueprint, while short on specifics, would offer legal status to immigrants as long as they admitted to wrongdoing, paid fines and taxes, submitted to a criminal background check and demonstrat­ed a mastery of English and civics.

Those steps would come only after measures were taken to secure borders, according to the plan.

Immigrants brought to the country illegally as children — so-called Dreamers — would be allowed to apply for legal residence and citizenshi­p, the document says.

The one-page draft, the culminatio­n of weeks of internal party debate, says there should be a zero-tolerance policy for immigratio­n law violators once reform is enacted and calls for stripping the presidenti­al power to use discretion when deciding whom to deport.

The plan’s lack of a special pathway to citizenshi­p for most of the 11 million drew fire from some Democrats, unions and Latino organizati­ons.

Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, described the draft as a “flimsy document.” Laura W. Murphy, director of the Washington legislativ­e office for the American Civil Liberties Union, said that a plan to legalize without a meaningful road to citizenshi­p would create a “legal purgatory” for immigrants.

But many Republican­s feel that immigrants who cross the borders unlawfully or overstay their visas should use existing procedures to apply for permanent residence and citizenshi­p, rather than being given a special process that would effectivel­y give them priority over immigrants who arrived legally. A “special path to citizenshi­p,” the document said, “would be unfair to those immigrants who have played by the rules and harmful to promoting the rule of law.”

The issue has deeply divided the party, with many conservati­ves opposed to pursuing any reform. Others say the GOP must tackle the issue to reach out to Latino voters, who have increasing­ly turned to the Democratic Party.

House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) presented the so-called principles document to his rank-andfile members, who have gathered at a resort hotel on the banks of the frozen Chesapeake Bay for a policy and strategy retreat.

“It’s important to act on immigratio­n reform because we’re focused on jobs and economic growth, and this is about jobs and growth,” he said, according to a source in the room for the presentati­on.

But Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, a leading Republican critic of immigratio­n reform, delivered a 30-page memo to the entire House GOP caucus, warning against immigratio­n reform.

“Republican­s must end the lawlessnes­s — not surrender to it — and they must defend the legitimate interests of millions of struggling American workers,” Sessions wrote.

The Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve think tank in Washington that is influentia­l among House conservati­ves, vowed to fight any plan that grants legal status. “We are warning against including any amnesty or grant of legal status to someone who is in the country illegally,” Derrick D. Morgan, the head of domestic and economic policy research, said in an interview.

Republican­s hope to narrow their internal difference­s and introduce legislatio­n this year. Boehner said the House would pursue a “step by step” approach to reform, rather than adopt the comprehens­ive legislatio­n passed by the Senate last year.

But any immigratio­n bills probably wouldn’t come up until June, when most of the congressio­nal primaries are over. This would protect Republican incumbents, who are facing challenges from the right, from having to make a tough vote.

If House Republican­s pass bills based on the newly released principles, it would put Democrats in a position of having to decide whether to reject the more scaleddown approach or accept it as preferable to no action at all.

Boehner, speaking to the Republican­s on Thursday, said the new standards “are as far as we are willing to go.”

Democrats, including President Obama, have stressed that any immigratio­n reform should include a pathway to citizenshi­p for most of the 11 million people in the country illegally.

“Nancy Pelosi said yesterday that for her caucus, it is a special path to citi- zenship or nothing,” Boehner said. “If Democrats insist on that, then we are not going to get anywhere this year.”

In a statement Thursday, Pelosi said, “As Republican­s unveil more specifics of their legislatio­n, we hope we can find common ground with our Democratic principles — to secure our borders, protect our workers, unite our families and provide an earned pathway to citizenshi­p.”

Alfonso Aguilar, executive director of the Latino Partnershi­p for Conservati­ve Principles, said the GOP’s draft “doesn’t close the door to citizenshi­p. It only says that if those who legalize want to become citizens, they need to follow the process establishe­d by current law.

“If Democrats decide to kill the GOP House plan because it doesn’t provide a special path to citizenshi­p,” he said, “it will show that they care more about politics than resolving the issue and bringing the undocument­ed out of the shadows.”

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