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Citizenship path possible hurdle to US immigration rewrite

Kathleen Hunter and Lisa Lerer

31 Jan 2013

By Kathleen Hunter and Lisa Lerer

Providing a path to citizenship for 11 million undocumented immigrants is emerging as a potential stumbling block to rewriting US immigration policy.

Republican senators who endorsed a bipartisan framework for the most significant revision of immigration law in almost three decades criticised a White House plan for not requiring tighter border security as a condition of a path to citizenship.

“One of the things that’s very important to me is to make sure that the enforcement mechanisms happen,” Sen Marco Rubio of Florida, one of four Republicans backing the Senate blueprint, said in an interview. “The mistake that’s been made in the past is that while the legalisation happened, the enforcement didn’t, and it led to the 11 million people that are here.”

President Obama is seeking to harness political momentum following his strong support from Hispanic voters in November to enact new immigration policy. Democrats say they are encouraged that an increasing number of Republicans have dropped their opposition to providing a path to citizenship as part of such a move.

“The good news is that, for the first time in many years, Republicans and Democrats seem ready to tackle this problem together,” Obama told a cheering audience on Tuesday at Del Sol High School in Las Vegas. “At this moment, it looks like there’s a genuine desire to get this done soon.”

Still, differences between the president’s outline and the Senate framework are coming into focus, most notably over conditions for allowing those already in the country illegally to become citizens.

In addition to tightened border security, Republicans want a citizenship path to hinge on tracking people in the United States on visas. A commission of governors, community members, and attorneys general living on the Southwest border would make a recommendation when the security measures are completed.

The White House plan doesn’t link citizenship to security, out of concerns that a longer process could make it almost impossible for those immigrants to gain full status.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported 396,906 people in fiscal year 2011 and a record 409,849 in fiscal 2012 according to figures released by the agency, part of the Department of Homeland Security.

Obama also supports equal treatment of same-sex couples when one partner is from outside the US. That provision isn’t included in the Senate framework and may be opposed by some Republicans.

“We hope the president is careful not to drag the debate to the left and ultimately disrupt the difficult work that is ahead in the House and Senate,” Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said following Obama’s remarks.

Boehner is among Republicans who have said that the party must find a more positive approach to immigration policy. Hispanics, a rapidly growing group of US voters, cast 71 percent of their votes for Obama on November 6, according to exit polls.

The increasing political clout of Hispanic voters, who make up 10 percent of the electorate and 16.7 percent of the population, has prompted Republicans who long opposed an immigration overhaul to reevaluate their position.

An immigration rewrite has drawn the backing of religious organisations, law enforcement and companies — including Wal-Mart Stores, Goldman Sachs, Microsoft, Intel and Google — that seek to hire more foreign workers.

Of the 47 million new workers entering the labour force between 2010 and 2050, a projected 37.6 million will be Hispanic, according to an October 2012 Bureau of Labor Statistics report. The percentage of Hispanics in the workforce will grow to 18.6 percent by 2020 and to 30 percent in 2050, doubling from 15 percent in 2010, according to the report.

Speaking on Tuesday at a school where more than 62 percent of the students are Hispanic, Obama warned that if immigration legislation is bogged down in Congress, he would send his plan to the Capitol and insist that lawmakers vote on it “right away.”

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev, cautioned that the president “has put his arms around the four senators on the Democratic side and the Republican side, but with the caveat he’s not going to wait around forever to actually have legislation that we 

move on.”

Obama gave tentative endorsement to the framework that the Republican and Democratic senators unveiled on Monday, saying the proposal was “very much in line with the principles I proposed and campaigned on.”

“Until the administration creates a comprehensive border security plan that includes a reasonable definition of operational control we can measure, we cannot quantify success or failure,” House Homeland Security Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, said in a statement. “The Senate blueprint appropriately made securing our borders a priority, while the administration appears content to once again neglect to do so.”

An effort by President George 

W Bush in 2007 to rewrite immigration law failed amid public ire over illegal immigration. WP-BLOOMBERG

New York Sen Chuck Schumer, the chamber’s third-ranking Democrat, said that he and other members of the bipartisan Senate group met on Tuesday night and made progress on what he characterised as one of the trickiest aspects of the measure: details of the border security elements that Republicans say must be a perquisite of a path to citizenship.

Senate Republicans working on the effort want to make sure that 11 million illegal immigrants in the country “aren’t treated any better, having crossed the border illegally, than those that waited in line,” Schumer said at a breakfast sponsored by Politico.

 

 

 

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a member of the group who also was at the Politico breakfast, said the bill’s enactment would require a “tough slog” ahead.

 

“It’s going to be a tough, tough fight,” he said.

 

If the efforts implode, as past attempts have, Hispanics will continue to turn away from Republicans and states like Arizona will start to trend Democratic, he said.

 

McCain’s fellow Arizona Republican, Jeff Flake, another member of the bipartisan group, said Tuesday that he will insist that citizenship can happen only after a “measurable increases in border security.”

 

“This provision is key to ensuring that border security is achieved, and is also necessary to ensure that a reform package can actually move through Congress,” Flake said in a statement.

 

Flake called on Obama to embrace a temporary worker program that the senator said is necessary “to ensure that future labor needs are addressed.”

 

Immigration legislation signed by President Ronald Reagan in 1986 made 3 million undocumented workers eligible for legal status and created a market for fraudulent documentation. Illegal immigration soared, casting a shadow of subsequent efforts to legalize immigrants.

 

 

“Immigration reform, like tax and Social Security reform, is very complex,” said Stephen Yale-Loehr, an immigration law expert and professor of law at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. “Even if everyone wants reform, it may still take a long time to get a bill through Congress.”

 

The plan may face its toughest test in the Republican-led House, which is dominated by lawmakers who have expressed little interest in immigration laws beyond tightening border security.

 

— With assistance from Roxana Tiron, Bennett Roth, Julianna Goldman and Joe Sobczyk in Washington and Amanda J. Crawford in Phoenix.

 

bc-immig-citizenship

 

WASHINGTON POST-BLOOMBERG-

By Kathleen Hunter and Lisa Lerer

Providing a path to citizenship for 11 million undocumented immigrants is emerging as a potential stumbling block to rewriting US immigration policy.

Republican senators who endorsed a bipartisan framework for the most significant revision of immigration law in almost three decades criticised a White House plan for not requiring tighter border security as a condition of a path to citizenship.

“One of the things that’s very important to me is to make sure that the enforcement mechanisms happen,” Sen Marco Rubio of Florida, one of four Republicans backing the Senate blueprint, said in an interview. “The mistake that’s been made in the past is that while the legalisation happened, the enforcement didn’t, and it led to the 11 million people that are here.”

President Obama is seeking to harness political momentum following his strong support from Hispanic voters in November to enact new immigration policy. Democrats say they are encouraged that an increasing number of Republicans have dropped their opposition to providing a path to citizenship as part of such a move.

“The good news is that, for the first time in many years, Republicans and Democrats seem ready to tackle this problem together,” Obama told a cheering audience on Tuesday at Del Sol High School in Las Vegas. “At this moment, it looks like there’s a genuine desire to get this done soon.”

Still, differences between the president’s outline and the Senate framework are coming into focus, most notably over conditions for allowing those already in the country illegally to become citizens.

In addition to tightened border security, Republicans want a citizenship path to hinge on tracking people in the United States on visas. A commission of governors, community members, and attorneys general living on the Southwest border would make a recommendation when the security measures are completed.

The White House plan doesn’t link citizenship to security, out of concerns that a longer process could make it almost impossible for those immigrants to gain full status.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported 396,906 people in fiscal year 2011 and a record 409,849 in fiscal 2012 according to figures released by the agency, part of the Department of Homeland Security.

Obama also supports equal treatment of same-sex couples when one partner is from outside the US. That provision isn’t included in the Senate framework and may be opposed by some Republicans.

“We hope the president is careful not to drag the debate to the left and ultimately disrupt the difficult work that is ahead in the House and Senate,” Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said following Obama’s remarks.

Boehner is among Republicans who have said that the party must find a more positive approach to immigration policy. Hispanics, a rapidly growing group of US voters, cast 71 percent of their votes for Obama on November 6, according to exit polls.

The increasing political clout of Hispanic voters, who make up 10 percent of the electorate and 16.7 percent of the population, has prompted Republicans who long opposed an immigration overhaul to reevaluate their position.

An immigration rewrite has drawn the backing of religious organisations, law enforcement and companies — including Wal-Mart Stores, Goldman Sachs, Microsoft, Intel and Google — that seek to hire more foreign workers.

Of the 47 million new workers entering the labour force between 2010 and 2050, a projected 37.6 million will be Hispanic, according to an October 2012 Bureau of Labor Statistics report. The percentage of Hispanics in the workforce will grow to 18.6 percent by 2020 and to 30 percent in 2050, doubling from 15 percent in 2010, according to the report.

Speaking on Tuesday at a school where more than 62 percent of the students are Hispanic, Obama warned that if immigration legislation is bogged down in Congress, he would send his plan to the Capitol and insist that lawmakers vote on it “right away.”

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev, cautioned that the president “has put his arms around the four senators on the Democratic side and the Republican side, but with the caveat he’s not going to wait around forever to actually have legislation that we 

move on.”

Obama gave tentative endorsement to the framework that the Republican and Democratic senators unveiled on Monday, saying the proposal was “very much in line with the principles I proposed and campaigned on.”

“Until the administration creates a comprehensive border security plan that includes a reasonable definition of operational control we can measure, we cannot quantify success or failure,” House Homeland Security Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, said in a statement. “The Senate blueprint appropriately made securing our borders a priority, while the administration appears content to once again neglect to do so.”

An effort by President George 

W Bush in 2007 to rewrite immigration law failed amid public ire over illegal immigration. WP-BLOOMBERG

New York Sen Chuck Schumer, the chamber’s third-ranking Democrat, said that he and other members of the bipartisan Senate group met on Tuesday night and made progress on what he characterised as one of the trickiest aspects of the measure: details of the border security elements that Republicans say must be a perquisite of a path to citizenship.

Senate Republicans working on the effort want to make sure that 11 million illegal immigrants in the country “aren’t treated any better, having crossed the border illegally, than those that waited in line,” Schumer said at a breakfast sponsored by Politico.

 

 

 

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a member of the group who also was at the Politico breakfast, said the bill’s enactment would require a “tough slog” ahead.

 

“It’s going to be a tough, tough fight,” he said.

 

If the efforts implode, as past attempts have, Hispanics will continue to turn away from Republicans and states like Arizona will start to trend Democratic, he said.

 

McCain’s fellow Arizona Republican, Jeff Flake, another member of the bipartisan group, said Tuesday that he will insist that citizenship can happen only after a “measurable increases in border security.”

 

“This provision is key to ensuring that border security is achieved, and is also necessary to ensure that a reform package can actually move through Congress,” Flake said in a statement.

 

Flake called on Obama to embrace a temporary worker program that the senator said is necessary “to ensure that future labor needs are addressed.”

 

Immigration legislation signed by President Ronald Reagan in 1986 made 3 million undocumented workers eligible for legal status and created a market for fraudulent documentation. Illegal immigration soared, casting a shadow of subsequent efforts to legalize immigrants.

 

 

“Immigration reform, like tax and Social Security reform, is very complex,” said Stephen Yale-Loehr, an immigration law expert and professor of law at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. “Even if everyone wants reform, it may still take a long time to get a bill through Congress.”

 

The plan may face its toughest test in the Republican-led House, which is dominated by lawmakers who have expressed little interest in immigration laws beyond tightening border security.

 

— With assistance from Roxana Tiron, Bennett Roth, Julianna Goldman and Joe Sobczyk in Washington and Amanda J. Crawford in Phoenix.

 

bc-immig-citizenship

 

WASHINGTON POST-BLOOMBERG-