AP
February 26, 2015
The Senate is moving forward on legislation to fund the Homeland Security Department, but the House is in limbo two days away from a partial agency shutdown as conservatives angrily reject the Senate plan.
Many
House Republicans say they aren’t ready to admit defeat and approve
spending for the department without demanding concessions from President
Barack Obama on immigration.
They are pressuring House Speaker John Boehner to hold firm against
that approach, even as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell argues
that it’s the best way out of the GOP’s dilemma.
No
other options are apparent, aside from a partial shutdown of the agency
charged with protecting the U.S. against terrorism. Without
congressional action, that will
happen at midnight Friday — and polls show Republicans likely to take
the political blame.
Boehner
met privately with McConnell on Wednesday afternoon, their first
meeting in two weeks, but he gave no indication during the day of how he
might resolve what has
become a high-stakes leadership test two months into full Republican
control of Congress.
“I’m
waiting for the Senate to act. The House has done their job,” Boehner
said at a news conference where he repeatedly sidestepped questions
about his plans.
Hours
after Boehner spoke, the Senate did act, voting 98-2 to advance the
Homeland Security funding bill over its first procedural hurdle. Several
more votes will be required
to bring the bill to final passage, but that outcome in the Senate is
assured with lawmakers of both parties ready to put the fight behind
them.
The
$40 billion legislation would fund the agency through Sept. 30, the end
of the budget year. Gone would be the contentious immigration language
from the House-passed
version that repealed Obama executive actions as far back as 2012
granting work permits and deportation stays to millions of people in the
country illegally, including immigrants brought here as kids.
Instead,
McConnell envisions a separate vote on a narrower immigration measure
to undo just Obama’s most recent immigration directives, from November.
The measure would
leave in place protections enacted in 2012 for younger immigrants, but
even so Democrats are not likely to approve that bill, and it faces a
certain Obama veto.
The president repeated that threat Wednesday at a town hall style meeting in Miami designed to keep pressure on Republicans.
“If
Mr. McConnell, the leader of the Senate, and the speaker of the House,
John Boehner want to have a vote on whether what I’m doing is legal or
not, they can have that
vote,” the president said. “I will veto that vote — because I’m
absolutely confident that what we’re doing is the right thing to do.”
Facing
united opposition from Democrats who blocked four GOP attempts to open
debate on the House-passed bill, McConnell said he was offering the best
plan he could. But
House conservatives called it a surrender and said they would not
abandon their fight, even if no outcome looked possible except a partial
Homeland Security shutdown that would furlough 30,000 workers and send
tens of thousands more to work without pay.
“On
one side, we’re faced with dealing with the horrible prospect of a
shutdown. If we do nothing and we just capitulate, we’re dealing with an
even more horrible prospect
of a constitutional crisis,” said Rep. Matt Salmon, R-Ariz. “It’s a
no-win situation.”
A
number of Republican lawmakers said the plan could potentially pass
with Democratic votes, but conservatives warned that Boehner would face
an intense backlash if he
took that route, as he’s done in the past.
Congress could potentially pass a short-term extension of current funding levels, but that would only postpone the conflict.
House
lawmakers openly chafed at the position they found themselves in after
agreeing last fall to put off the fight over immigration until this
year. The argument was
that they would have more leverage once Republicans controlled the
Senate and claimed larger numbers in the House.
That
hasn’t proven to be the case, mainly because the GOP commands only 54
votes in the Senate, short of the 60 needed to advance most legislation
under the chamber’s
rules. And Obama’s veto pen still gives him the ultimate leverage.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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