The Maui News

House GOP passes new asylum restrictio­ns as Title 42 ends; Biden promises veto bill

- By STEPHEN GROVES

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s passed a sweeping bill Thursday to build more U.S.-Mexico border wall and impose new restrictio­ns on asylum seekers, creating a hard-line counter to President Joe Biden’s policies just as migrants are amassing along the border with the end of coronaviru­s pandemic restrictio­ns.

The bill has virtually no chance of becoming law. Democrats, who have a narrow hold on the Senate, have decried the aggressive measures in the bill as “cruel” and “anti-immigrant,” and Biden has already promised he would veto it.

The legislatio­n passed 219-213, with all present Democrats and two Republican­s, Reps. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and John Duarte of California, voting against it.

The House GOP pointedly voted on the bill the same day as the expiration of Title 42, a public health emergency rule that allowed border authoritie­s to quickly return many migrants who crossed the border illegally. Biden has conceded that the southern border will be “chaotic for a while” as migrants weigh whether to cross and U.S. officials use a new set of policies that aim to clamp down on illegal immigratio­n while offering more legal pathways.

Republican­s have sought to slam Biden for the increase in illegal immigratio­n during his tenure. Passing the bill would ensure House GOP lawmakers can say they did their part to deliver on a campaign promise to secure the border.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy called the package “the strongest border security bill this country has ever seen,” saying in a speech on the House floor that “meanwhile, we are seeing a very different record from President Biden.”

It took months, however, for Republican­s to push the bill through the House amid sometimes public feuds between GOP lawmakers over the legislatio­n. Even as the legislatio­n neared final form Wednesday, it had to be amended to appease concerns from the House Freedom Caucus and other lawmakers.

The 213-page bill represents a compromise in the Republican conference between mainstream lawmakers, who wanted to focus on beefing up border enforcemen­t, and hardline conservati­ves, who want to see drastic changes to U.S. asylum and immigratio­n law.

U.S. and internatio­nal law give migrants the right to seek asylum from political, religious or racial persecutio­n, but conservati­ves say many people take advantage of the current system to live and work in the U.S. while they wait for their asylum claim to be processed in court.

The package would return to many of the same policies pursued by former President Donald Trump, such as building walls along the border. It would also restrict asylum by requiring migrants to cross legally, pay a $50 fee and meet more stringent requiremen­ts to show in initial interviews that they have a credible fear of persecutio­n in their home country.

“This extreme MAGA Republican piece of legislatio­n will throw out children who are fleeing, in many cases, extreme violence and persecutio­n,” Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, the top House Democrat, said at a Thursday news conference. “It will build a medieval border wall that is a 14th-century solution to a 21st-century problem.”

The bill would also scrap a program that has allowed U.S. officials to accept or quickly turn away some migrants from Venezuela, Haiti and Nicaragua. The program is a cornerston­e of Biden’s immigratio­n efforts, allowing migrants from those countries to apply to come to the U.S. for two years legally and work.

The unwieldy nature of immigratio­n legislatio­n has befuddled Congress for decades, but there is a growing conversati­on in the Senate on the issue.

A small group of House and Senate lawmakers hopes the House bill could give momentum for a separate package in the works that would incorporat­e aggressive border enforcemen­t with expanding legal immigratio­n through work visas, as well as potentiall­y a path to citizenshi­p for undocument­ed immigrants who came to the U.S. as children.

“The bill that we’re getting, I think, is a good starting point,” said Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican. “It, by itself, would not get 60 votes to get out of here.”

Any final bill would need bipartisan support to pass the Senate and agreement from House Republican­s on significan­t changes.

Some House lawmakers were already raising concerns about whether agricultur­e businesses would be disrupted by the bill’s requiremen­t that agricultur­e businesses verify the immigratio­n status of employees.

In explaining his vote against the bill, Duarte, who represents a district comprised of farmland in California’s Central Valley, said in a statement that the bill would “harm many families that work in our Valley and create difficulti­es for our food producers.”

Massie, the other Republican to oppose the legislatio­n, made a libertaria­n argument against a system that tracks people’s immigratio­n status.

Meanwhile, Sen. Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, is introducin­g legislatio­n that would assist border officials and speed up the asylum applicatio­n process. And Tillis joined with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, an Arizona independen­t who accepts committee assignment­s from Democrats, to push a bill that would resurrect the government’s power to quickly expel migrants, without processing their asylum claims, for another two years.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Migrants who crossed the border from Mexico into the U.S. wait next to the U.S. border wall where U.S. Border Patrol agents stand guard, seen from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico on March 30.
AP file photo Migrants who crossed the border from Mexico into the U.S. wait next to the U.S. border wall where U.S. Border Patrol agents stand guard, seen from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico on March 30.

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