Miami Herald

GOP negotiator defends border proposal amid Trump pressure

- BY ALICIA DIAZ Bloomberg News

A key Republican senator defended an emerging border security deal as a step toward potentiall­y halting illegal immigratio­n, defying persistent pressure by former President Donald Trump to abandon the plan.

“I’m looking forward to President Trump getting the opportunit­y to be able to read it, like everybody else is,” Oklahoma Senator James Lankford, the bill’s top Republican negotiator, said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “This bill focuses on getting us to zero illegal crossings a day,” he said on Fox News Sunday.

The bill would tighten asylum access, increase U.S. Border Patrol agents and asylum officers, detain and deport more immigrants and restrict migrant releases into the U.S., Lankford said, in the most detailed summation a negotiator has provided to date.

With no agreed version of the plan published, House Republican­s have slammed news reports that suggest it wouldn’t meet the full range of their demands to address what has also become an election-year challenge for President Joe Biden. The deadlock is also holding up Biden’s request for billions in emergency aid to U.S. allies such as

Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan.

Speaker Mike Johnson

THIS BILL FOCUSES ON GETTING US TO ZERO ILLEGAL CROSSINGS A DAY. James Lankford, Oklahoma Senator and the bill’s top Republican negotiator

last week declared the Senate’s proposal “dead on arrival” in the House if “rumors” about about what it contains are true. Trump echoed previous posts on his social media platform and praised Johnson while campaignin­g for the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination in Las Vegas on Saturday.

“I noticed a lot of the senators, a lot of the senators are trying to say – respectful­ly, they’re blaming it on me,” Trump told the crowd. “That’s OK. Please blame it on me. Please. Because they were getting ready to pass a very bad bill. I’d rather have no bill than a bad bill.”

Lankford didn’t provide specifics on when the bill text would be ready, though fellow Senate negotiator­s said last week it was close to complete.

Connecticu­t Senator Chris Murphy, the top Democratic negotiator, told CNN’s “State of the Union” he’s confident that enough Republican­s in the chamber will join in to pass the legislatio­n, “potentiall­y as early as the next week or two.”

Some lawmakers have chafed at Trump’s effort to influence the bordersecu­rity negotiatio­ns.

“He’s irrelevant to this conversati­on, he’s not in office, all right? “Florida Senator Rick Scott said on “Fox News Sunday.” “And by the way, I talked to President Trump, he’s never asked me to be opposed to something.”

President Biden said Friday that the emerging deal, if passed, is the “toughest and fairest set of reforms” the U.S. has ever had and would give him emergency authority to “shut down the border when it becomes overwhelme­d.”

The action would look similar to the authority used during COVID-19 to oust asylum-seekers and other immigrants, called Title 42.d.

“And if given that authority, I would use it the day I sign the bill into law,” Biden said.

Republican­s have criticized the latter, claiming the president could use his executive powers now to turn around the influx of immigrants from the border with Mexico.

Biden said this month that he would be open to major changes at the U.S.Mexico border, including to asylum policies – a significan­t concern among progressiv­e members of the party – if it meant finalizing a deal to unlock aid for Ukraine.

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER TNS ?? Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., speaks at a press conference on taxes at the U.S. Capitol Building on Aug. 3, 2022, in Washington, D.C.
ANNA MONEYMAKER TNS Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., speaks at a press conference on taxes at the U.S. Capitol Building on Aug. 3, 2022, in Washington, D.C.

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