Durbin to work with minority Republicans on updated immigration reform
Send a link to a friend
[September 14, 2023]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Illinois’ senior U.S. senator may be working with
his colleagues across the aisle to craft another bipartisan attempt at
immigration reform.
Years have gone by since a bipartisan effort was made to bring about
reforms to U.S. immigration policy. Signs of a rekindling were shown
this week in a U.S. Senate committee.
While Tuesday’s U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee hearing was meant to
focus on the issue of what kinds of books are available in public
libraries and schools, U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina,
wanted to discuss migrants crossing the southern border.
“We’ve had 146 people on the terrorist watchlist, and FY22, which is
about 2.4 million came across, since President [Joe] Biden's been
president, five-and-a-half million people have come across illegally,”
Graham said. “That’s bigger than the state of South Carolina.”
More than 13,500 migrants have relocated to just Chicago in the past
year. Illinois U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Springfield, acknowledged
previous work on drafting reforms.
“Gang of Eight, four Democrats, four Republicans, wrote a comprehensive
immigration reform bill which I still think in whole can be still used
as a template for where we need to go,” Durbin said.
[to top of second column]
|
Illinois U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Springfield
BlueRoomStream
The measure Durbin referenced from a decade ago was criticized as
bringing about amnesty. Republicans are looking for the border to be
closed.
Durbin said the measure they drafted years ago had some favorable
parts for people illegally brought to the United States as children,
among other things.
“The decision in the bill was that those who were undocumented
currently living in the United States would report themselves to the
government and pay their taxes and their Social Security,” Durbin
said. “They would not qualify for citizenship, at least in the
outset, and the idea was to get everybody on the books once and for
all.”
U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said while Durbin’s bill may have
passed one chamber years ago, it didn’t cross the finish line.
“That was also a different time than we are in now when the Biden
border crisis became so dire,” Cornyn said.
Durbin suggested working on an updated proposal with Senate Minority
Republicans. Republicans say closing the border must be paramount.
|