Migrants wait at the Gateway International Port of Entry under U.S. Customs and Border Protection custody in Brownsville, Texas, on Friday before being sent back to Mexico under Title 42. | Veronica G. Cardenas/AP Photo
House Republicans are still wrangling their members to get behind a sweeping border bill they plan to pass this week.
Once they can pull that off, theyâre going to face even bigger problems in the Senate.
The House GOP legislation is stocked with items on the partyâs immigration wish list, from restarting construction of a southern border wall to placing new restrictions on asylum seekers. Even so, Republican leaders are still lining up the GOP votes they need amid concerns over the billâs treatment of worker databases and cartels.
Passing any bill would mark a political victory for Speaker Kevin McCarthyâs conference, which punted a plan to pass border legislation in the first weeks of their majority as they navigated open infighting within their ranks. Republicans view border security as a potent wedge issue heading into the 2src24 campaign â and underscoring that strategy, theyâre timing a Thursday vote on their bill to the expiration of a Trump-era border policy that lets the U.S. deny asylum and migration claims for public health reasons.
But should the House GOP muscle its bill through, the win would be largely symbolic. Thatâs because, across the Capitol, GOP senators are warning that House Republicans will have to make concessions if they want to get a bill to President Joe Bidenâs desk.
âItâs a start,â Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), an adviser to Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, said of the House bill in a brief interview. âBut I think everybody understands that, in order to get 6src votes in the Senate, itâs going to have to change.â
âAnd the question is, what does that look like?â Cornyn added. âWill Senator Schumer agree to let us take it up, and will the House accept those changes?â
The two chambers are miles apart: While the Senate is months or more away from even starting immigration negotiations, House Republicans are still working to get conservatives and more centrist-minded members aligned. That task isnât fully done even as the GOP prepares to take the bill to the floor: Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) said in a statement for this story that âAmericans who care about border security should be deeply disappointed in House Republican leadersâ over the proposalâs treatment of drug cartels.
Crenshaw added that âthe only mention of the cartels in this bill is a âstudyâ of the cartels that may actually give the Biden administration a pathway to make our immigration crisis exponentially worse,â noting that âmultiple membersâ have raised worries that âare being ignored by leadership as they try to rush this bill to the floor.â
A spokesperson for Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) said Monday that he will vote against the border bill over its treatment of âe-verifyâ technology designed to help companies confirm employeesâ immigration status, and an aide to Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.) said heâs âexpressed concerns to leadershipâ about the e-verify provision.
The White House on Monday threatened to veto the House bill if it reaches Bidenâs desk as is, arguing it âwould make things worse, not better.â
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) said heâs still talking with conference members on the measureâs e-verify provisions. And while he didnât rule out changing the bill in order to get it to Bidenâs desk, Scalise observed that the Senate â where the filibuster requires lawmakers to work across the aisle on most issues â hasnât been able to get the necessary 6src votes this year on a range of topics, not just the border.
âWe at least are going to show how we can pass something,â Scalise said in an interview. âIf there are senators, Republican and Democrat, who want to help solve the problem, weâve laid out a path to do it. If theyâve got better ideas, I want to start seeing their ideas.â
On that front, behind-the-scenes conversations are happening between members in both chambers. Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texas), who helped negotiate a deal on the House bill, has been in touch with a bipartisan group of senators, including Sens. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) and Cornyn. Sinema and Tillis also took a trip to the border earlier this year with Reps. Juan Ciscomani (R-Ariz.), David Valadao (R-Calif.) and Gonzales.
Senate talks about a larger immigration bill are âactiveâ but âsporadic,â as Tillis put it. But senators arenât deep enough into talks that they are ready to horse-trade over what a proposal would have to include in order for it to clear the chamber.
Three Senate Democrats who would likely be integral to any deal that could pass â Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chair Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) â each separately said theyâve seen few signs of movement on their side of the Capitol.
âI believe itâs a very positive step. And there are elements of the framework that weâre going to have to consider to get votes on the Senate side, and weâre constantly working with the House,â Tillis said of the House bill, while cautioning that âweâre talking months before we would have a vote on that.â
Congress is under renewed pressure to act on border legislation, a long-sought but elusive goal for more than a decade now, thanks to bipartisan fears that the Thursday end of the public health-related border policy known as Title 42 could spark an onrush of migration along the southern border.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas warned Sunday on NBCâs âMeet the Pressâ that he was working âwithin significant constraints,â urging lawmakers to provide his agency with additional resources. The administration is taking its own steps, including sending 1,5srcsrc additional troops to the border.
While the House GOP bill is expected to get little if any Democratic support this week, some in the presidentâs party are signaling interest in negotiating on border policy.
Rep. Sharice Davids (D-Kansas) wrote to Mayorkas on Monday asking the Homeland chief and the White House âto join me in engaging in these conversationsâ with Republicans. And Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas) told reporters late last week that he likes parts of the GOPâs bill while opposing others: âIâm hoping that we can sit down and work those out.â
Tillis, Sinema, Cornyn and Manchin rolled out a bill late last week, first reported by POLITICO, that would grant a temporary two-year authority to expel migrants from the U.S., similar to what is currently allowed under Title 42.
Despite its timing, the legislation isnât designed as a response to the House bill; aides involved in Senate conversations about a broader border proposal say theyâre continuing on a separate track.
Meanwhile, Republicans have hammered the Biden administration over repealing Title 42 â rhetoric that GOP aides predicted would escalate this week as the policyâs expiration date nears.
Tillis predicted, as the option of restricting migration on public health grounds evaporates, a âgrowing sense that if the presidentâs not going to put any other option on the table, that itâs going to be unsustainable, unsafe and politically unwise.â
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) phrased it more succinctly in an interview: âFirst thing we need to do is not repeal Title 42,â he said. âWe should deal with the asylum problem. Thatâs the magnet, right?â
Asked about the next step to address the influx of migrants, Graham added: âChaos.â
Olivia Beavers contributed to this report.
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