NewsJune 27, 2018

WASHINGTON -- House Republicans are set to vote today on a hard-fought immigration compromise between conservative and moderate GOP flanks, but the bill has lost any real chance for passage despite a public outcry over the crisis at the border. Instead, lawmakers are expected to turn toward a narrow bill to prevent immigrant family separations in hopes of addressing the issue before leaving town for the Fourth of July recess...

By LISA MASCARO and ALAN FRAM ~ Associated Press
Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, R-Wis., walks with his staff to a closed-door GOP strategy session Tuesday at the Capitol in Washington. Ryan has scheduled a long-awaited showdown vote on a broad Republican immigration bill today, but he's showing little confidence the package will survive.
Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, R-Wis., walks with his staff to a closed-door GOP strategy session Tuesday at the Capitol in Washington. Ryan has scheduled a long-awaited showdown vote on a broad Republican immigration bill today, but he's showing little confidence the package will survive.J. Scott Applewhite ~ Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- House Republicans are set to vote today on a hard-fought immigration compromise between conservative and moderate GOP flanks, but the bill has lost any real chance for passage despite a public outcry over the crisis at the border.

Instead, lawmakers are expected to turn toward a narrow bill to prevent immigrant family separations in hopes of addressing the issue before leaving town for the Fourth of July recess.

GOP leaders set out to pass the sweeping immigration measure on their own, without Democratic input, after some members agitated for action. Now they are facing almost certain defeat, stung by their own divisions and President Donald Trump's wavering support.

It remained unclear late Tuesday what the final version of the immigration legislation would contain. GOP negotiators had been working over the weekend on an amendment to tack on provisions to draw more support. But it was not expected to be included.

The broader bill includes trade-offs, including a multi-year path to citizenship for young immigrants who have been living in the U.S. illegally since childhood and $25 billion for Trump's border wall. It also would stem family separations at the border by doing away with longstanding rules preventing minors from being detained for more than 20 days; instead, children could be held in custody with their parents for longer stretches.

House Speaker Paul Ryan insisted the drawn-out effort has been worthwhile and could lay the groundwork for an eventual legislative package. But such an outcome is unlikely to happen anytime soon. Today's vote was expected to be a check-the-box exercise designed to fulfill a promise to moderate Republicans who demanded the House GOP address immigration.

"We have a big conference with big, different views," Ryan said about the GOP majority controlling the House. "What we have here is the seeds of consensus that will be gotten to, hopefully now, but, if not, later."

In a last-ditch effort to round up more support, GOP negotiators were considering an amendment requiring employers to verify legal status of employees and addressing immigrant workers in the agricultural sector. They also considered a provision to prevent parents of young immigrants from gaining citizenship.

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But with Trump panning the entire package, and wavering lawmakers backing off, moderate leaders were weighing whether it made sense to pile on more provisions if there were no more supporters to be gained.

Instead, they were settling on a version without the late changes.

Final passage remained in doubt because many conservatives are simply opposed to the legislation's underlying provision -- a chance for citizenship for many immigrants who arrived illegally in the U.S. as children. They have blasted the provision as "amnesty."

"You've got to be unified on this and I get the feeling we're not unified," said Rep. Paul Cook, R-Calif., who said he was still deciding how to vote.

Democrats widely oppose the Republican overhaul. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Trump needs to fix the problem created by the administration's "zero-tolerance" policy of criminally prosecuting anyone caught crossing illegally that resulted in family separations at the border.

"This administration needs to present a plan ASAP of how to unify the kids and how to deal with border," Schumer said.

More than 2,300 children have been separated from their parents after illegal crossings, sparking public outrage over the spectacle of crying children being held in makeshift facilities. The practice was abandoned after Trump ordered the families kept together.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar testified Tuesday before the Senate Finance Committee the agency cannot reunite the families while parents remain in custody because, under a legal settlement, the children cannot be held beyond 20 days.

He wants Congress to fix the law. But questioned by Democratic senators, Azar refused to say how long the children would remain in Health and Human Services shelters.

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