U.S.
House passes border-security funding bill to speed deportations
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[August 02, 2014]
By David Lawder and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans in the
U.S. House of Representatives voted on Friday to crack down on Central
American migrants, including unaccompanied children, who are flooding to
the U.S. border with Mexico, as lawmakers passed a $694 million border
security bill.
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The 223-189 vote came one day after conservative Republicans
balked at an earlier version of the measure, exposing a deep rift
between Tea Party activists and more mainstream Republicans.
In passing the retooled bill, the Republican-led House ignored a
veto threat from the White House. But with the Senate already on a
five-week summer recess, this measure will advance no further at
least until September.
"We couldn't go home (for recess) and not have a decision," said
Representative Kay Granger of Texas, who helped draft the original
bill.
Granger said the measure would serve as a marker for negotiations in
September to resolve the humanitarian crisis that has seen nearly
60,000 children from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala arrive
illegally since October to escape criminal drug gangs and poverty.
House Democrats complained that the legislation would too speedily
return children to dangerous conditions in their home countries.
President Barack Obama called the Republican bill "extreme" and
"unworkable."
Later on Friday, the House also passed a separate bill reversing
Obama's 2012 policy suspending deportations of some undocumented
residents who were brought to the United States as children years
ago by their parents.
The measure also would bar Obama from expanding this policy,
possibly to parents of children who already qualify.
The tougher language in the twin bills would make it easier to
deport migrant children and add money to deploy National Guard
troops at the border with Mexico.
The changes were intended to satisfy conservative House Republican
lawmakers who withdrew their support on Thursday amid a revolt
instigated by Senator Ted Cruz, the Tea Party firebrand from Texas.
On Thursday, the Democratic-controlled Senate failed to advance its
own $2.7 billion border funding bill, as Republicans lined up to
stop it on a procedural vote.
With Obama's $3.7 billion border funding request rejected by
Congress, but no alternative legislation presented to him for
signing into law, Obama said he would shift funds from other
accounts to pay for enhanced border security and the care and
feeding of thousands of detained migrant children.
"I'm going to have to act alone because we don't have enough
resources," Obama told reporters. "We've already been very clear.
We've run out of money."
Friday's action capped a day of bitter debate over U.S. immigration
policy.
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With the two votes, the House went on record in favor of
accelerating the return of children to their home countries while
also reversing much of Obama's two-year-old policy that suspended
deportation efforts against children brought to the United States
illegally by their parents before mid-2007.
The measure would prohibit those who have already been given a
reprieve from deportation from renewing their status when it expires
after two years.
The child migrant crisis has become an increasingly hot topic ahead
of the mid-term elections in November that will determine control of
Congress next year.
The Republicans have been trying to present a united front against
Obama to energize the party's voting base, including a move this
week to sue him in federal court for allegedly overstepping his
legal authority.
Republicans may have papered over their differences for now, but
they could resurface after the summer break when negotiations
intensify.
Boehner in September will have two hot-button issues to navigate
through the House: a return to the border funding issue and a
stop-gap spending bill to keep government agencies open in the new
fiscal year starting on Oct. 1.
This week's dust-up in the House also may give Democrats a new
opening to remind voters - and Democratic donors - of the Tea
Party's influence over Republicans.
They attacked the revised Republican plan as putting at risk the
children of undocumented immigrants, often known as "dreamers," who
have grown up in the United States. The Republican push could
aggravate immigrant communities that have been hoping for
comprehensive reforms.
(Additional reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Doina Chiacu,
Bill Trott, Frances Kerry and Ken Wills)
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