Steep obstacles for U.S. Congress effort to legalize 'Dreamer'
immigrants
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[August 06, 2021]
By Richard Cowan and Ted Hesson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A battle to win a
path to citizenship for "Dreamer" immigrants, following two decades of
defeat, is underway in the U.S. Senate as Democrats face tough
challenges on several fronts, including within their own ranks.
For the millions of immigrants who were brought to the United States as
children, crossing the border illegally or overstaying visas, an obscure
Senate procedure known as "budget reconciliation https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-senates-reconciliation-process-its-not-way-it-sounds-2021-06-16"
could determine their future this year.
Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer hopes to use it to
bypass the need for Republican support on legislation that would have
Dreamers and possibly millions of other immigrants hitch a ride toward
citizenship via a $3.5 trillion measure they call "human infrastructure"
investments.
The stakes could not be higher. "If we don't have reconciliation, I'm
not sure there's a pathway forward," said Democratic Senator Robert
Menendez.
Separate efforts to craft bipartisan legislation to protect the
immigrants who were shielded from deportation under former President
Barack Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program
have collapsed, said a Senate aide who asked not to be identified.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham reflected the opposition from many in
his party to any reforms until immigrant arrivals at the southern border
slow. "I'm not willing to provide legal status to anybody with a broken
porous border because it will create more problems. Everybody will come
and want to be the next generation of DACA," he said.
To move ahead, Schumer must keep his 50 Democrats and independents
united on reconciliation this autumn. Opposition by any would sink the
effort, along with Dreamers' hopes of living normal lives in the United
States.
Moderate Democratic Senators Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Joe Manchin
of West Virginia already stand out as potential obstacles. But other
Democrats facing re-election next year may need convincing, too.
Complicating matters is the politically difficult task of pursuing
reforms when migrant border arrests are at 20-year highs, fueling
Republican attacks on President Joe Biden.
Greisa Martinez Rosas, executive director for the immigrant-youth group
United We Dream was in Washington in 2010 when the Dream Act failed.
"I remember crying with hundreds of young undocumented people," she
said.
Besides Dreamers, Democrats might include farmworkers, healthcare and
other employees deemed "essential" and those who fled wars and natural
disasters -- a potential total of over 6 million people, according to
experts.
A July court ruling striking down DACA, which currently protects around
640,000 young immigrants from deportation, has made a legislative remedy
all the more pressing. Their status was maintained pending other court
proceedings but new enrollments were halted.
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DACA recipients and their supporters celebrate outside the U.S.
Supreme Court after the court ruled in a 5-4 vote that U.S.
President Donald Trump's 2017 move to rescind the Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, created in 2012 by his
Democratic predecessor Barack Obama, was unlawful, in Washington,
U.S. June 18, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
Already, there are political cracks in the Democratic
effort.
"I'm totally supportive of immigration," Manchin told Reuters when
asked about attaching reforms to the massive infrastructure bill.
But he quickly added he supports the Senate's "Byrd rule," allowing
"extraneous matter" to be removed from reconciliation bills by the
Senate parliamentarian's office.
Early this year, Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough barred
a minimum wage increase from being included in a COVID-19 aid bill.
Attempts to overrule the decision failed.
Many Democrats argue a properly drafted immigration provision can
survive parliamentary challenges like an immigrant visa measure did
in 2005.
Sinema told the Arizona Republic newspaper she opposes the $3.5
trillion plan because of its high cost. Aides would not say whether
she supports including immigrant protections in infrastructure
legislation.
THE LURE OF RECONCILIATION
Talks between Senate Democrats and Republicans have failed to
produce a bipartisan bill, fueling Democrats' go-it-alone approach
through reconciliation.
"I have several (Republicans) who are just determined to stop
whatever bill is offered" under conventional legislative procedures,
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin said in a hallway
interview.
That leaves all eyes on the parliamentarian, who in coming months is
expected to decide whether to allow such sweeping immigration
reforms.While voters largely support helping certain immigrants
seeking legal protection from deportation, a July Reuters/Ipsos poll
found only about 8% see immigration as a top priority.
Republican Senator John Cornyn, who has opposed some past reform
efforts, now wants a stripped-down bill giving permanent legal
status to the 640,000 Dreamers protected by DACA, leaving many
others behind. Durbin rejected that idea.
"We've been talking about this for the entire time I've been here in
the Senate," said Cornyn, who became a senator in 2002. "And there's
never any action."
(Reporting by Ted Hesson and Richard Cowan; Editing by Scott Malone
and Aurora Ellis)
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