Reuters
By Richard Cowan
December 4, 2014
U.S.
Republicans, outraged with President Barack Obama for easing
deportations of millions of undocumented residents, plan legislation in
2015 strengthening the U.S.-Mexican border to discourage
illegal immigration.
The
move, likely to come early next year according to House Republican
leadership aides, may lead to other steps the House of Representatives
could contemplate to repair parts of U.S. immigration
law.
When
legislation materializes, it would follow a year and half of
congressional inactivity in the aftermath of the passage of a sprawling
Senate bill backed by Obama but killed by the House.
"I
think there is the realization...that this issue is not going away,"
said Republican Representative Mario Diaz-Balart, who has labored to
write broad immigration legislation.
House
Homeland Security Committee Chairman Michael McCaul likely will oversee
the effort, according to leadership aides. McCaul has pushed
legislation imposing tough standards for border apprehensions.
Given
the House's rejection of the Senate's work in 2013, a strategy is
emerging for 2015 to have the House take the lead in the hope of making
better progress.
The 2013 Senate bill's pathway to citizenship for millions of undocumented residents was a lightning rod for opposition.
"I want it to start in the House," said Republican Senator John McCain, a leading immigration reform proponent.
McCain
said bills improving border security, establishing an online system for
companies to check their workers' immigration status and expanding
visas for high-tech foreign workers could
be first out of the gate. The latter two are important to U.S.
businesses.
Senior House Republican aides said it was unclear what bills might move next year beyond border security.
Republicans
hope to gain more control of the immigration debate as they will hold
majorities in the House and Senate for the first time since 2006.
They need to improve their standing with Hispanic-American voters as the party strives to capture the White House in 2016.
Passing tougher immigration measures will be difficult, though, as Democratic votes will be needed.
Obama
warned business leaders this week that "it's going to be hard, I think,
for me and for other Democrats" to support piecemeal legislation that
deals with the concerns of business but
does not address undocumented Americans.
One
leading Democrat on immigration, Representative Zoe Lofgren, was asked
if she could support a Republican border security bill, for example.
"It
depends on what it is," Lofgren said, adding Republican Representative
"Steve King wants to do a (border) wall with electrified wire...I don't
think that's a winning vote."
Ultimately,
Republicans must address the approximately 12 million undocumented
residents living in the United States for extended periods, McCain and
Diaz-Balart said.
Many Republicans argue that allowing them to stay in the U.S. rewards law-breakers.
Meanwhile,
House Republican leadership is more conservative with the recent
election of Representative Steve Scalise to the third-ranking position.
Scalise opposes giving legal status to undocumented
residents.
Furthermore,
the House immigration debate could unfold as a seasonal spike of
illegal migration from Central America gets underway. Last summer's
arrival of tens of thousands of unaccompanied
minors stoked tensions between Republicans and immigration advocates.
For
legislation to succeed in 2015, "a lot of things have to line up and
they're not lined up now," said one Republican congressman who asked not
to be identified.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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