Reuters
By David Lawder
November 12, 2014
(Reuters)
- A growing number of Republicans in Congress want to use government
spending bills as leverage to prevent President Barack Obama from taking
unilateral action to ease U.S. immigration
policies.
Senator
Jeff Sessions, poised to lead the Senate Budget Committee next year, on
Wednesday called on his fellow Republicans to press for a short-term
spending bill extension into early next
year and withhold funds needed to implement any "unlawful amnesty" for
undocumented immigrants ordered by Obama.
He
told reporters that a short-term extension into next year would allow a
new Republican majority in the Senate to cut spending and be in a
position to use spending bills to prevent Obama
from issuing visas and identification cards to such immigrants.
A
short-term extension "would be smart for a whole lot of reasons,"
Sessions said. "Senator Reid shouldn't be entitled to bind the country
next year when we've got a new Congress," he said,
referring to Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid.
Meanwhile,
more than 50 House Republicans have signed a letter circulated by
conservative Representative Matt Salmon, calling for a pre-emptive
strike to bar from spending legislation any
use of federal money to legalize undocumented immigrants. Salmon plans
to send the letter to House Republican leaders on Thursday, his
spokesman said.
The
House and Senate Appropriations committees are negotiating a $1
trillion "omnibus" spending package that would keep the government
funded through Sept. 30, 2015. Congress must pass new
spending legislation by Dec. 11 to avoid a government shutdown.
The
warnings over immigration funding were reminiscent of Republicans' zeal
to de-fund Obama's health care reform law in 2013, which led to a
16-day shutdown of federal agencies last year.
House
Republican leaders have previously favored a longer-term spending bill
that would allow them to concentrate on other issues next year. But
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy said he
would listen to members.
"We'll get together as a conference and all decide," McCarthy told reporters.
Sessions
said a Republican Congress next year could act to deny funding for the
implementation of any executive order Republicans oppose.
"If
Congress disapproves of the president providing ID cards and all that
for people who’ve been in the country illegally, they should not
appropriate the money to fund it."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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