[Mb-civic] Senators Back Guest Workers - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Mar 28 03:55:25 PST 2006
Senators Back Guest Workers
Panel's Measure Sides With Bush
By Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 28, 2006; A01
A key Senate panel broke with the House's get-tough approach to illegal
immigration yesterday and sent to the floor a broad revision of the
nation's immigration laws that would provide lawful employment to
millions of undocumented workers while offering work visas to hundreds
of thousands of new immigrants every year.
With bipartisan support, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 12 to 6 to
side with President Bush's general approach to an immigration issue that
is dividing the country, fracturing the Republican Party and ripening
into one of the biggest political debates of this election year.
Conservatives have loudly demanded that the government tighten control
of U.S. borders and begin deporting illegal immigrants. But in recent
weeks, the immigrant community has risen up in protest, marching by the
hundreds of thousands to denounce what they see as draconian measures
under consideration in Washington.
"There is no issue outside of civil rights that brings out the kind of
emotions we have seen," said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), one of
the bill's primary sponsors, who called the controversy "a defining
issue of our times."
Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) rushed committee
members to complete their work to meet a midnight deadline imposed by
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), who favors a tougher
approach more in line with the version passed by the House last
December. But once the committee had acted, Frist declined to say last
night whether he would substitute the committee's legislation for his
own, which includes no guest-worker program.
Frist's efforts to wrest control of the issue from the Judiciary
Committee could produce a power struggle among Republicans once the
majority leader brings up the issue for debate and votes in the full
Senate, probably this week. Specter and the other committee leaders may
have to muscle their bill through as an amendment if Frist refuses to
back down.
Frist, a presidential aspirant whom Bush helped elect as majority
leader, favors tightening control of the nation's borders without
granting what he calls amnesty to the approximately 11 million illegal
immigrants living in this country. But Bush favors a comprehensive
approach, which he says must include some program to answer business's
need for immigrant labor.
"Congress needs to pass a comprehensive bill that secures the border,
improves interior enforcement, and creates a temporary-worker program to
strengthen our security and our economy," Bush said yesterday at a
ceremony to swear in 30 new U.S. citizens from 20 countries. "Completing
a comprehensive bill is not going to be easy. It will require all of us
in Washington to make tough choices and make compromises."
Polls indicate about 60 percent of Americans oppose guest-worker
programs that would offer illegal immigrants an avenue to lawful work
status, and three-quarters of the country believe the government is
doing too little to secure the nation's borders.
But the immigrant community has been galvanized by what it sees as a
heavy-handed crackdown on undocumented workers by Washington. The House
in December rejected calls for a guest-worker program and instead
approved a bill that would stiffen penalties on illegal immigrants,
force businesses to run the names of each employee through federal
databases to prove their legality, deploy more border agents and
unmanned aerial vehicles to the nation's frontiers and build massive
walls along sections of the U.S.-Mexican border.
At least 14,000 students stormed out of schools in Southern California
and elsewhere yesterday, waving flags and chanting to protest
congressional actions. About 100 demonstrators, including members of the
clergy, appeared at the Capitol yesterday in handcuffs to object to
provisions in the House bill that would make illegal immigrants into
felons and criminalize humanitarian groups that feed and house them.
More than a half-million marchers protested in Los Angeles on Saturday,
following protests in Phoenix, Milwaukee and Philadelphia.
"The immigration debate should be conducted in a civil and dignified
way," Bush said. "No one should play on people's fears, or try to pit
neighbors against each other."
A confrontation between the Senate and House Republicans now appears
inevitable.
"We are eager, once the Senate passes this bill, to sit down and talk
with them, but there are certain fundamental principles which we simply
cannot compromise on," said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who cosponsored
the bill that passed the Judiciary Committee largely intact last night.
"It has to be a comprehensive approach. As we all know, just building
walls and hiring more border patrols are not the answers to our
immigration problem."
Specter, the committee chairman, had tried for weeks to find a middle
ground between senators advocating a generous guest-worker program and
those categorically rejecting amnesty for illegal immigrants. In the
end, that search for a compromise failed because advocates of the
guest-worker program had more than enough votes to overcome conservative
opposition.
The panel voted to accept a bill largely patterned on the measure
sponsored by Kennedy and McCain. Specter and Republican Sens. Lindsey O.
Graham (S.C.), Sam Brownback (Kan.) and Mike DeWine (Ohio) joined the
committee's Democrats to win passage.
The panel's bill would allow the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants
in this country to apply for a work visa after paying back taxes and a
penalty. The first three-year visa could be renewed for three more
years. After four years, visa holders could apply for green cards and
begin moving toward citizenship. An additional 400,000 such visas would
be offered each year to workers seeking to enter the country.
Senators also accepted a proposal by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.)
that would offer 1.5 million illegal farmworkers a "blue card" visa that
would legalize their status. The committee also accepted a provision by
Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.) that would shield humanitarian
organizations from prosecution for providing more than simple emergency
aid to illegal immigrants, rejecting an amendment by Sen. John Cornyn
(R-Tex.) to require humanitarian groups providing food, medical aid and
advice to illegal immigrants to register with the Department of Homeland
Security.
Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) protested that the Feinstein proposal was more
focused on offering illegal immigrants a path to citizenship than
meeting the labor demands of agriculture. Cornyn suggested the Judiciary
Committee bill was moving toward creating a caste of second-class workers.
But Cornyn may have summed up Senate fears when he referred to energized
voters protesting what they see as amnesty for people who violated the
nation's laws and made a mockery of its borders.
"The American people are thinking, 'Fool me once, shame on you, fool me
twice, shame on me,' " he said. "The only way we can get the confidence
of the American people is to convince them we are absolutely serious
about border security and law enforcement."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/27/AR2006032700684.html?nav=hcmodule
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