'Dreamer' immigration bill not on U.S.
Senate agenda this month
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[December 19, 2017]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate will
not consider an immigration bill as part of year-end legislation but
will turn to a measure protecting immigrant youths known as "Dreamers"
in January, No. 2 Senate Republican John Cornyn said on Monday.
Cornyn also said that if Congress cannot meet an early March deadline
for passing legislation providing the protections against deportation
for undocumented immigrants who were brought illegally into the United
States as children, President Donald Trump could consider extending the
deadline.
In interviews over the past several days, both Republican and Democratic
lawmakers and aides said that talks on Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals (DACA) have been quietly making progress.
"The president has given us enough time to deal with this before March
and so I think that’s plenty of time and I expect us to meet it," Cornyn
told reporters. "If we can’t, then the president could extend the
deadline if he chose to do so. But this is something we’re going to turn
to, I’m sure, in January."
Tensions between Republicans and Democrats over the issue of legislative
protections for Dreamers increased this fall after Trump took a hard
line on the conditions for a deal.
An intense lobbying campaign has been underway to urge lawmakers to find
a permanent legislative fix after the Republican president ended the
DACA program in September. He gave Congress until early March to come up
with a legislative replacement.
On Capitol Hill, advocates have handed out buttons to lawmakers and
aides with the number “122,” referring to the estimated number of
Dreamers each day who already are losing the temporary legal status they
had under DACA.
Immigration advocates have erected a huge monitor on the National Mall.
Situated at the base of the U.S. Capitol for lawmakers and tourists
alike to see, it broadcasts videos of Dreamers pleading for help.
Meanwhile, seven DACA beneficiaries from Mexico, Argentina and Colombia
were in the fourth day of a hunger strike to draw attention to the
issue.
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'Dreamers' hug as they meet with relatives during the 'Keep Our
Dream Alive' binational meeting at a new section of the border wall
on the U.S.-Mexico border in Sunland Park, U.S., opposite the
Mexican city of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, December 10, 2017. Picture
taken from the U.S side of the U.S.-Mexico border. REUTERS/Jose Luis
Gonzalez
Republican Representative John Carter, a veteran of past immigration
debates, said he worried Democrats want to go way beyond the scope
of DACA and the approximately 800,000 Dreamers who at one time or
another were covered by Democratic former President Barack Obama's
executive order.
"They're talking Dream Act," Carter said referring to the
legislation offered by Democratic Senator Dick Durbin and Republican
Senator Lindsey Graham. "And that number is about 2 million people.
That's too much."
Past legislative attempts to allow Dreamers to get work permits and
drivers licenses, open bank accounts and "come out of the shadows"
have stalled as conservative Republicans and lobbying groups
objected to giving "amnesty" to anyone who entered the United States
illegally - even those who had no choice in the matter and have
grown up here.
Democratic Representative Michelle Lujan Grisham, who chairs the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus, said Republican demands for
additional resources for immigration enforcement throughout the
United States and not just at the border are a major problem.
Her concern is that the Trump administration might use the money to
hire more federal agents to nab undocumented relatives of Dreamers.
"If you're going to come in and go to hospitals and go to courtrooms
and go to schools" in search of family members, "I'm not going to do
that," she said in an interview.
(Reporting By Richard Cowan; additional reporting by Susan Cornwell;
Editing by Tom Brown and Caren Bohan)
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