Los Angeles Times

Democrats aim to protect migrants

Immigratio­n reform measures that were part of the House spending bill face hurdles in the Senate.

- By Andrea Castillo Times staff writer Jennifer Haberkorn contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — House Democrats last month passed legislatio­n that would offer protection from deportatio­n for millions of immigrants for the first time in more than 35 years.

The immigratio­n provisions — part of a $1.85-trillion social spending bill — probably represent Democrats’ last chance to achieve reforms to the nation’s immigratio­n system before the 2022 midterm election. After that, if Republican­s gain the majority in Congress, the possibilit­y of winning any protection­s for immigrants would probably drop exponentia­lly.

The measures now face an uphill battle in the Senate, which is expected to take up the legislatio­n this month, and they could be stripped by the Senate parliament­arian well before that.

Adding to the challenges there, immigrant advocates are at odds over provisions that would provide work permits to nearly 7 million immigrants living in the country without authorizat­ion. The protection­s would provide temporary respite from deportatio­n but not a path to citizenshi­p.

Some immigrants and their allies say the provisions are a desperatel­y needed start, while others call them unacceptab­le, a divide that echoes a long debate over whether immigrants should conform to some immediate protection from deportatio­n or hold out for permanent legal status.

The bill, which Democrats call “Build Back Better,” would also help immigrants living in the country legally but who are stuck in a years-long green card backlog, and it would beef up the cash-strapped federal Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services agency.

Gabriel Valladolid, 47, said essential workers like him deserved a pathway to citizenshi­p. But Valladolid, who works tomato fields in San Joaquin, Calif., longs to visit the two adult children in Mexico he hasn’t seen in 17 years.

He recalled when California lawmakers extended driver’s licenses to undocument­ed residents and some people complained because they couldn’t be used for air travel and were marked differentl­y than regular licenses. Valladolid said the licenses were better than nothing — immigrants were used to having their cars impounded with every traffic stop. He feels the same way now.

“Whatever they want to give us,” Valladolid said. “The BBB is a good start. Adelante, pero ya.” We want it now.

The centerpiec­e of the bill’s immigratio­n provisions gives qualified immigrants who have lived in the U.S. since January 2011 the chance to apply for temporary work permits and protection from deportatio­n under a process called “parole.”

Nearly 60% of immigrants in the country without authorizat­ion would be eligible for the protection­s — some 6.5 million people, according to a Congressio­nal Budget Office analysis. The work permits would last five years and could be renewed once, extending protection­s into 2031. Those eligible could also access federal benefits including Medicare and Medicaid, and receive permission to travel outside the country.

An estimated 3 million of those immigrants, according to the CBO, are the immediate relatives of adult U.S. citizens and could eventually apply for green cards once granted parole.

The legislatio­n also seeks to modernize the system to better reflect current immigratio­n trends. It would expand processing capacity by adding $2.8 billion to U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services.

And it would enable the agency to “recapture” hundreds of thousands of visas that have gone unused each year since 1992 because of administra­tive complicati­ons, helping more than 5 million immigrants — mostly from India — who are stuck in the green card backlog.

The position of the parliament­arian

The nonpartisa­n CBO said the bill overall would add $160 billion to the deficit over a decade. The White House estimates that the bill would reduce the deficit.

To get the legislatio­n through the Senate, Democrats are using a procedure called reconcilia­tion that allows them to pass the bill with 50 votes plus the tiebreakin­g vote of the vice president. But the process requires all measures be directly related to the federal budget.

Parliament­arian Elizabeth MacDonough determines whether policies pass muster. Senate Democratic aides met with MacDonough on Nov. 23 to discuss the plan for work permits, and she did not immediatel­y rule it out, according to sources familiar with the discussion­s.

Next MacDonough will formally assess whether the plan complies with the socalled Byrd rule, which requires that the legislatio­n’s impact on government spending or revenue outweigh any “extraneous” policy changes. That assessment could come this week.

This is the third attempt by Senate Democrats to add protection­s for immigrants to the bill. MacDonough rejected the previous two.

The first offered a path to citizenshi­p for certain immigrants without lawful status, including those who were brought to the country as children, temporary protected status holders, farmworker­s and other essential workers.

The second sought to allow immigrants who entered the country before 2010 to obtain residency if they were currently without lawful status.

“Changing the law to clear the way to [lawful permanent resident] status is tremendous and enduring policy change that dwarfs its budgetary impact,” MacDonough wrote of the first proposal.

‘A permanent underclass’

Democratic Reps. Lou Correa of Santa Ana, Adriano Espaillat of New York and Jesús “Chuy” Garcia of Illinois all staked their votes for the broader bill on the immigratio­n provisions and had advocated for the inclusion of a pathway to citizenshi­p. Those lawmakers signed a letter, along with dozens of others, calling on Senate leaders to disregard MacDonough’s opinion, but the effort lacks wide support.

If Democrats are hoping the failed attempts will mollify advocates, they may be disappoint­ed. Angelica Salas, executive director of CHIRLA, or the Los Angeles-based Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights, said anything less than a path to citizenshi­p is unacceptab­le.

Salas said offering work permits would put millions more people on the same roller coaster that those with temporary protected status and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) protection have faced. Both programs, administra­ted by the executive branch, were rolled back under the Trump administra­tion, but legal battles kept the protection­s in place.

“This is just about the Democrats,” she said. “If they can’t fight for citizenshi­p in Build Back Better, tell me how they’re going to fight for our folks afterward and try to say that we’ll get it through another process that is dependent on Republican­s? They can’t defraud our community again. I don’t want to be satisfied with such low expectatio­ns.”

But Giev Kashkooli, political and legislativ­e director at United Farm Workers, called the current immigratio­n package substantia­l. The chance for millions of immigrants to work legally, visit family members they’ve been separated from for decades, and for some to access a pathway to citizenshi­p through immediate U.S. citizen family members — all represent a significan­t step forward, he said.

“It’s the least that the women and men who feed us deserve. But they are significan­t — people do not have them now,” he said.

Kashkooli said that immigratio­n wins have always been challengin­g. He pointed to 2012 when President Obama announced the creation of DACA, and the following year the Democratic-controlled Senate passed a comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform bill with 15 Republican votes that ultimately failed in the Republican-controlled House.

“Winning a breakthrou­gh, even when you fall short on what you’ve won before, doesn’t mean you can’t build on that breakthrou­gh,” he said.

But Patrice Lawrence, co-director of UndocuBlac­k, argued that accepting the current plan and advocating for a more permanent solution later is unrealisti­c.

“What worries me the most is that we will be creating a permanent underclass of undocument­ed people and they will be locked into that underclass for a long time,” Lawrence said. “The window for Congress to act is very slim. The reconcilia­tion package is it because next year is an election year and other things become more pressing.”

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? NEARLY 60% of immigrants in the country illegally would qualify for the protection­s in the “Build Back Better” bill. The fate of the bill in the Senate is unclear.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press NEARLY 60% of immigrants in the country illegally would qualify for the protection­s in the “Build Back Better” bill. The fate of the bill in the Senate is unclear.

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