Santa Fe New Mexican

GOP splits over citizenshi­p issue

- By Alan Fram Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Divisions over whether to provide a conduit to citizenshi­p for so-called Dreamer immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally loomed as the pivotal sticking point Wednesday as House Republican­s searched for a solution to their campaign-season standoff over an issue that has split them for years.

GOP leaders, moderates and conservati­ves bargained anew, with some saying the talks were productive. But there was no evidence an agreement was at hand, while there were signals the party’s long-standing chasm over whether to help immigrants here illegally become citizens remained unresolved.

Rep. Carlos Curbelo, R-Fla., a leader of moderates trying to force leaders to hold votes on the issue, told reporters that of all his immigratio­n priorities, permanent status for Dreamers was “most important” and “essential.”

But Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., leader of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, said that “no special pathway to citizenshi­p” would be acceptable to conservati­ves. “Why would we give blanket waivers to people who came here illegally?” Meadows said.

Curbelo and Meadows both said it was possible to find middle ground between their positions. But compromise has eluded party leaders for years, and it remained unclear how they would resolve the impasse by next month, when House leaders have promised showdown immigratio­n votes.

Leaders set a pivotal closeddoor meeting on immigratio­n among House Republican­s for June 7, days after lawmakers return from a weeklong recess. Rep. John Katko, R-N.Y., said he and other moderates would see if that session could produce an accord among Republican­s before pressing ahead on a petition drive that could force votes on the issue.

“If they come to a good agreement, great. If they don’t we’re going forward,” he said.

Bills backed by moderates would give hundreds of thousands of Dreamers a way to become permanent U.S. residents — a status that can later lead to citizenshi­p. Dreamers were brought to the U.S. illegally as children and have been temporaril­y protected by an Obamaera program that President Donald Trump has terminated, though courts have kept the initiative alive for now.

Conservati­ves want legislatio­n that would let those immigrants stay in the U.S. in renewable but temporary increments. They have opposed creating a new way for them to move toward citizenshi­p and would instead limit them to existing pathways, such as marrying a U.S. citizen.

Curbelo and other moderates gained their 21st Republican signature Wednesday on a petition that would force a series of votes on immigratio­n bills that House leaders are trying to avoid. With all 193 Democrats expected to sign, the moderates need just four more Republican names to reach 218, a House majority, and moderate leaders say they have enough commitment­s to reach 25.

The moderates want votes on four bills, including measures by conservati­ves and liberals.

Under that process, the measure likeliest to prevail would let Dreamers stay in the U.S. permanentl­y and bolster border security, but not finance the border wall with Mexico that Trump wants.

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Mark Meadows

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