The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Early rift over immigratio­n exposes House GOP’s tough path to consensus

- By Marianna Sotomayor and Theodoric Meyer

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s’ attempt to bring a border security bill to the floor as early as this week was thwarted after backlash from more moderate Republican­s, delaying not only a pledge Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) made to a handful of lawmakers but also the fulfillmen­t of a key campaign promise to a Republican base eager for tougher immigratio­n laws.

The bill, introduced by Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) and co-sponsored by 58 Republican­s, would empower the Homeland Security secretary — currently Alejandro Mayorkas — to unilateral­ly bar all undocument­ed migrants from entering the United States through any point of entry if the secretary deems it necessary to reestablis­h “operationa­l control” of the border. If immigratio­n agencies cannot, for any reason, process undocument­ed migrants according to legal procedures, a similar response by the secretary would be required. If the secretary does not follow through, the bill would provide state attorneys general the authority to sue the federal government.

But the scope of the three-page bill has rattled dozens of House Republican­s, many of whom worry it would prevent migrants and unaccompan­ied children fleeing violence from seeking asylum in the U.S. — a traditiona­lly protected tenet of the country’s immigratio­n laws. Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas), who represents the largest stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border of any lawmaker, is one of two Republican­s who have taken the lead in opposing the bill.

Republican­s can only afford to lose four votes to pass any legislatio­n through their razor-thin majority without help from Democrats. The margin recently decreased to three after Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.) suffered injuries after a fall last week, making it unclear when he could return to Washington.

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) previewed in December Republican­s’ intention to bring “meaningful, ‘readyto-go’ legislatio­n,” including the border security bill, to the floor in the first two weeks after they took control of the House. McCarthy then went further, pledging to fast-track the bill’s considerat­ion as part of a “gentlemen’s agreement” earlier this month that won over most of the 21 holdouts, including Roy, who were blocking him from becoming speaker. Opposition from moderates has scuttled those plans.

“We can’t allow the Republican Party to be hijacked,” Gonzales said, referencin­g his colleagues pushing the legislatio­n. “Trying to ban legitimate asylum claims — one, it’s not Christian, and two, to me, it’s very anti-American. So a lot is at stake.”

The bill in its current form likely would never be considered by the Democratic-controlled Senate. But the backlash has exposed the deep divisions over border security that continue to plague the party even though Republican­s across the spectrum have sharply criticized the Biden administra­tion’s approach to the issue.

Rep. Don Bacon (RNeb.) and two other members of the Main Street Caucus, a group of self-described pragmatic Republican­s, secured a commitment from McCarthy’s aides on Friday that the bill would go back to the House Homeland Security Committee rather than being fast-tracked to the floor, according to Bacon.

“We’re convinced that if it goes through committee, some of the areas that we’re worried about, like asylum rules, will hopefully get fixed or improved,” he said.

Some Republican lawmakers are focused on measures to aid border communitie­s overwhelme­d by migrants, while more conservati­ve lawmakers have pushed to immediatel­y halt the historic flow of migrants entering through the U.S.Mexico border until a wall is built. The disagreeme­nts threaten House Republican­s’ ability to fulfill campaign pledges that they would pass legislatio­n securing the border that could also stem the influx of fentanyl into the U.S.

Republican­s have highlighte­d the record number of people crossing the U.S.-Mexico border as a contrast between them and the Biden administra­tion, going as far as threatenin­g to impeach Mayorkas and fighting to keep a pandemic-era border restrictio­n that gives law enforcemen­t the discretion to immediatel­y expel migrants, including asylum seekers, by citing public health concerns.

But some House Republican­s, especially those who were in Congress when previous immigratio­n bills failed, have privately expressed skepticism that bipartisan immigratio­n legislatio­n could clear the House this Congress, pointing blame at far-right lawmakers who have criticized many bipartisan efforts as offering amnesty.

In response to the criticism from within his party, Roy said his bill would require law enforcemen­t to detain migrants who claimed asylum but wouldn’t prevent migrants from doing so. He accused Gonzales of deliberate­ly misreprese­nting his bill by claiming it would effectivel­y ban asylum claims.

“No one’s trying to ban asylum,” Roy said.

The Border Safety and Security Act as written cites that DHS has the discretion to “suspend the entry of any non-U.S. nationals ... during any period when DHS cannot detain such an individual or return the individual to a foreign country.” While the GOP majority overwhelmi­ngly agrees on the need to curb illegal immigratio­n and reform the asylum process, the scope of the bill’s text suggests that any time detention centers are overwhelme­d, the government could be required to immediatel­y reject any undocument­ed immigrant, including asylum seekers, from entering the U.S. from any port of entry.

In a letter sent to lawmakers Tuesday and obtained by The Washington Post, El Paso Bishop Mark J. Seitz, the chairman of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ migration committee, echoed concerns and stressed that the bill

“We can’t allow the Republican Party to be hijacked. Trying to ban legitimate asylum claims — one, it’s not Christian, and two, to me, it’s very anti-American. So a lot is at stake.” Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas), one of two Republican­s who have taken the lead in opposing the bill

“is antithetic­al to our nation’s moral principles.”

“If enacted, this legislatio­n would sever access to protection for vulnerable persons on the move, including asylum seekers, unaccompan­ied children, victims of torture and victims of human traffickin­g who are fleeing life-threatenin­g situations,” Seitz wrote.

Gonzales has led the charge against Roy’s bill, which also has the support of a dozen other Texas Republican­s, while noting that claiming asylum can save unaccompan­ied children en route to the U.S., as well as Afghan and Ukrainian refugees. Rep. María Elvira Salazar (RFla.), who said she would also vote against the bill, called it unrealisti­c to handle the immigratio­n crisis with such hard-line stances since it could negatively influence how legal immigratio­n reforms are debated and instituted.

“Are we stupid? Come on. This country was based on good minds. Look at Albert Einstein, we gave him a piece of paper to come in,” Salazar said, referencin­g the German Jewish physicist who settled in the United States after Adolf Hitler came to power. “We are letting the Albert Einstein of this modern time slip away.”

McCarthy’s deal with the holdouts during his speaker fight has irked other Republican­s, who privately have expressed that many concession­s were made without consultati­on of the full GOP conference. It has empowered other factions outside of the hard-right to make demands of leadership when necessary given the majority’s slim margin.

Besides overall concerns about the proposal, several Republican­s were annoyed and called out the speaker holdouts for demanding that the House return to “regular order,” ensuring that every bill originates in committees, while also trying to force leadership’s hand in making Roy’s bill skip that lengthy process.

“That’s going to be very difficult, I think, for people to support [the bill]. It’s not going through traditiona­l order to be vetted and to be amended in a way that all sides have a voice in this thing,” Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) said in an interview. “It will never pass the Senate if we’re only talking border security.”

Republican­s could have sent the bill to the Rules Committee, which sets the parameters of debate for a bill before it hits the floor. But that committee has yet to be formally establishe­d, given the delay in electing McCarthy as speaker. Several bills related to law enforcemen­t were delayed in considerat­ion earlier this month because the committee did not exist yet to make minor tweaks.

Returning the bill to the Homeland Security Committee would allow it to be amended in a way that could appease some Republican­s’ concerns. Many members who served on the committee last term were part of McCarthy’s task forces that took input from across the GOP’s ideologica­l factions to create a framework for immigratio­n reforms, which aides said could serve as a template to reform the bill.

Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.), who chairs the staunchly conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus and is a cosponsor of the bill, said he was open to moderates offering amendments to it.

“Border security is national security,” Perry said. “And if they want to explain to their constituen­ts why they’re not interested in a secure border and a more secure nation, then God bless them.”

But Roy has been working to win over Republican­s with concerns about the bill, and said he has no objections to moving the bill through the Homeland Security Committee rather than bringing it straight to the floor - as long as Republican­s don’t try to weaken its provisions.

“We’re not gonna water this down with a bunch of exceptions that swallow the rule,” Roy said. “If these guys want to start making exceptions to the rule — the rule is secure the border, stop the flow [of migrants], allow people to claim asylum but they have to be detained while that process is being done - that’s the nonnegotia­ble hill to die on, because it won’t stop the flow.”

Gonzales and Bacon also worry that taking up hard-line bills like Roy’s proposal could hurt House Republican­s politicall­y, especially in parts of the country where the party has made significan­t gains with Hispanic voters.

“If you want to lose the majority, this is how you do it,” Gonzales said.

In a Sunday interview on Fox News, Scalise said

the House plans to piece together “a package of bills to secure the border” to eventually send to the Senate, adding on Twitter it would force the upper chamber “to go on record and say if they are for open borders or for ending the flow of deadly drugs and illegal immigratio­n.”

Gonzales has put forth legislatio­n with three other Texas Republican­s — including Rep. Monica De La Cruz, who is the only other Republican who represents a border district in Texas — that would double funds allocated through a grant program to the southern border that helps bolster border patrol and law enforcemen­t agencies.

Since arriving to Congress last term, Salazar, who is Cuban American, has made it her singular mission to pass immigratio­n reform, most recently proposing a solution to the legal immigratio­n process that has been plagued by visa backlogs. The second plank of her proposal, an updated version of which is expected in the spring, will be composed of proposals often championed by Republican­s and Democrats to help undocument­ed immigrants, like Dreamers and farmworker­s, attain a pathway to citizenshi­p and funds more border security.

Salazar said she plans on speaking to her Freedom Caucus colleagues about how helping many people “come out of the shadows to work with dignity” will only help bolster the U.S. economy, as it has done over decades.

“The American exceptiona­lism, we are the big elephant in the room, saving the room. But in order for us to continue being the saviors of the world ... we need to fix the economy and fix immigratio­n,” Salazar said. “Reality is hitting us in the face, so we have to face it.”

 ?? Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post ?? Rep. Tony Gonzales, of Texas, center, is leading Republican opposition to the immigratio­n bill. At right is Speaker Kevin McCarthy.
Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post Rep. Tony Gonzales, of Texas, center, is leading Republican opposition to the immigratio­n bill. At right is Speaker Kevin McCarthy.
 ?? Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post ?? A bill proposed by Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, center, would require U.S. officials to bar migrants at the border if they cannot be processed.
Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post A bill proposed by Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, center, would require U.S. officials to bar migrants at the border if they cannot be processed.

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