AP
By Richard Lardner
January 18, 2016
The Senate will consider rigorous new screening procedures for Syrian and Iraqi refugees seeking to enter the United States as national security looms large for voters in an election year.
Propelled
by the Islamic State group’s attacks in Paris, the GOP-backed
legislation raced through the House last November with 289 votes. That
veto-proof margin included
47 Democrats despite the Obama administration’s opposition to the
measure.
The legislation will have a much harder time making it through the Senate in the week ahead.
Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., needs at least six Democrats to join all
54 Republicans to approve a motion clearing the bill for final passage
in the 100-member
chamber.
The
Senate’s top Democrat, Harry Reid of Nevada, said last year that was
not going to happen. Even if it did, President Barack Obama has pledged
to veto the bill if it
gets to him.
The
upshot may be more of the same on Capitol Hill: A war of words, with
Republicans blasting Obama for failing to do what they see as necessary
to secure the United States
and Democrats accusing the GOP of fearmongering to score points with
voters.
Some of the key points to know about the Syrian-Iraqi refugee legislation:
__
WHAT THE HOUSE BILL DOES
The
Islamic State group controls territory in Syria and Iraq. As a result
of the extremists’ harsh, uncompromising rule, people in those areas
have tried to flee and make
it to the United States. The House-passed American Security Against
Foreign Enemies Act is rooted in concerns the current process of
screening refugee is inadequate and could allow a terrorist to be
admitted into the United States.
The
legislation would order FBI background checks for Syrian and Iraqi
refugees and require that the FBI, Homeland Security Department and the
director of National Intelligence
certify that each refugee is not a security threat. The bill’s
requirements would effectively suspend admissions of Syrian and Iraqi
refugees.
Republicans
pointed to the arrest this month of two Iraqi refugees with suspected
links to terrorism as one more example of the flawed vetting system.
Over
the past few months, voters’ concerns about terrorism have surged and
their confidence in the government’s ability to defeat IS and other
extremist groups has plummeted,
according to a national survey conducted in December by the Pew
Research Center.
“I
think there’s a sense we need to do everything we can to demonstrate we
take seriously the responsibility to protect the country,” Republican
Sen. John Thune of South
Dakota, a member of the GOP leadership, said last week at a party
retreat in Baltimore.
___
A PROMISE TO VETO
The
White House said Obama would veto the House bill. The legislation
“would provide no meaningful additional security for the American
people,” it said in a Nov. 18 statement.
Refugees
of all nationalities, including Syrians and Iraqis, already face a
demanding screening process, and the legislation “would unacceptably
hamper our efforts to
assist some of the most vulnerable people in the world,” the statement
said. The White House said more than 2,100 Syrian refugees have been
admitted to the United States since 2001 and not one has been arrested
or deported on terrorism-related grounds.
___
‘DON’T WORRY, IT WON’T GET PASSED’
After
the House passed the bill Nov. 19, Reid predicted it would die in the
Senate. “Don’t worry, it won’t get passed,” he told reporters.
A final decision on how the Democrats will proceed is expected on Wednesday at their weekly caucus meeting.
Without
support from Democrats, the math doesn’t work for McConnell. He needs a
half-dozen Democrats to pass a motion to proceed and eventually allow a
vote on the legislation.
Thirteen more Democrats would be needed to reach a veto-proof tally.
Despite
Reid’s optimism, the House vote demonstrated that opposing the
legislation can be dicey for Democrats facing tight 2016 elections.
Before the House vote, White
House aides went to the Capitol to win over Democrats. Rep. Sean
Patrick Maloney, D-N.Y., told them, in a forceful exchange, that voting
“no” could hurt Democrats at the polls.
Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said other steps should include addressing illegal immigration more broadly and barring the sale of guns to people on federal terrorism watch lists — a move the Senate recently rejected.
Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said other steps should include addressing illegal immigration more broadly and barring the sale of guns to people on federal terrorism watch lists — a move the Senate recently rejected.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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