WashimgtonThe Senate has left hundreds of thousands of Dreamer immigrants in limbo, rejecting rival plans that would have spared them from deportation and strengthened the nations border security.
Senators on Thursday dealt President Donald Trump an especially galling defeat as more than a quarter of fellow Republicans abandoned him on an issue that helped propel him to the White House.
Also defeated on Thursday was a plan by a bipartisan group of senators who offered a compromise that would have shielded the young immigrants and financed Trumps demands for money to build his border wall, though more gradually than he wants. Eight Republicans joined most Democrats in backing that plan, but it fell short after the White House threatened a veto and GOP leaders opposed it.
The days votes, in which four separate proposals were defeated, illustrated anew Congress steep challenge in striking a deal on an issue thats proven intractable for years and on which each partys most fervent supporters refuse to budge. The outcome suggested there may be no permanent solution soon to help the young immigrants, who were brought to the US as children, despite their sky-high support in public polling.
The Senate votes left the young immigrants facing a March 5 deadline that Trump has given Congress for restoring the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, that he annulled last year. Federal courts have blocked him temporarily from dismantling the Obama-era initiative, but without congressional action the immigrants will face growing risks of deportation as their protections expire.
‘Dreamers’ in danger
Dreamers are immigrants who were brought to the US as children and now risk deportation because they lack permanent authorization to stay. DACA gives them the ability to live and work in the US for two-year periods that can be renewed.
It looks like demagogues on the left and the right win again on immigration, said Senator Lindsey Graham, who helped craft the bipartisan package but also backed Trumps plan. He added, The only way forward is for President Trump to grab the reins and lead us to a solution.
That scenario wasnt in sight Thursday. The White House trashed the bipartisan proposal as dangerous policy that will harm the nation, denouncing a provision directing the government to prioritize enforcement efforts against immigrants who arrive illegally beginning in July. Trump proved unwilling to fold on his demands for a tougher bill, reflecting the hard-line immigration stance that fueled his presidential run.
After the Senate rejected all four proposals on Thursday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell blamed Democrats for failing to accept what he said was a generous offer from Trump.
They turned away from a golden opportunity to solve the issue, said McConnell. He expressed openness to considering a future compromise but said, For that to happen, Democrats will need to take a second look at Trumps demands.
Trump had dangled a chance for citizenship for 1.8 million young immigrants, meeting a top Democratic demand. But that plan also included $25 billion to build his border wall with Mexico and enact other border security measures, tighter curbs on relatives whom legal immigrants could sponsor for citizenship and an end to a visa lottery that encourages immigration from diverse nations.
No. 2 Senate GOP leader John Cornyn of Texas said after the votes, the lawmakers might consider temporarily protecting Dreamers from deportation in a government-wide spending measure which Congress will consider next month.
He said that approach to me is not great, but thats kind of where we are.
‘Torpedoing bipartisan efforts’
Democrats said Trump was the major hindrance to a broader deal.
This vote is proof that President Trumps plan will never become law, said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York. If he would stop torpedoing bipartisan efforts, a good bill would pass.
The Senate derailed Trumps proposal by voting 60-39 against it 21 votes shy of the 60 it needed to survive.
Fourteen Republicans more than 1 in 4 joined 46 Democrats in opposition. The no votes included some of the chambers most conservative Republicans, many of whom were uncomfortable with offering citizenship to immigrants here illegally.
Just three Democrats backed Trumps proposal, all of them facing dicey November re-election in states he carried easily in 2016: Indianas Joe Donnelly, North Dakotas Heidi Heitkamp and West Virginias Joe Manchin.
The vote on the bipartisan plan was 54-45, six short of the required 60. Eight Republicans who helped craft that compromise supported it, and three Democrats voted no, including Senator Kamala Harris, whos viewed as a 2020 presidential hopeful.
That proposal offered the citizenship pathway for Dreamers and $25 billion for border security, but doled it out over 10 years. Trumps bill would have prevented legal immigrants from sponsoring parents and siblings for citizenship and would have ended a visa lottery aimed at allowing more diverse immigrants into the US The compromise bill would have left the lottery system intact but barred the young immigrants known as Dreamers who obtain citizenship from sponsoring their parents.
The bipartisan measures sponsors included eight GOP senators. It was produced by a group led by Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine and Democrat Manchin.
Also rejected was a modest plan by Senators John McCain and Chris Coons. It would have let many Dreamers qualify for permanent residency and directed federal agencies to more effectively control the border by 2020. But it didnt offer a special citizenship pathway, raise border security funds or make sweeping changes in legal immigration rules.
A proposal by Senator Pat Toomey was killed that would have blocked federal grants to sanctuary cities, communities that dont cooperate with federal efforts to enforce immigration laws.
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