By W. James Antle, III on 5.31.07 @ 12:09AM
The coalition backing the Senate immigration bill is under pressure left and right.
When President Bush traveled to Georgia Tuesday to promote the
Senate immigration bill, he didn't sound like he was happy with the
way the debate was going. "If you want to scare the American
people, what you say is the bill's an amnesty bill," he complained.
"That's empty political rhetoric trying to scare our citizens."
And that's not the rhetoric of a politician who feels like he is
currently winning a policy battle. This debate wasn't supposed to
get so heated. When a bipartisan group of senators announced the
immigration deal two weeks ago, Democrats and Republicans alike
were predicting swift passage, perhaps before Memorial Day weekend.
What gives?
We've been down this road before. When the Democrats took
control of Congress, it was widely assumed that President Bush
would finally get the path to citizenship for illegal immigrants
that his own party had denied him. But when Congress convened this
year, there were reports that key Republican senators -- including
a couple of presidential
candidates -- were backtracking on an immigration partnership
with Ted Kennedy.
Then Congressmen Jeff Flake and Luis Gutierrez introduced their
bipartisan
bill to a flurry of favorable editorials. Yet instead of blossoming
into the fruitful immigration compromise Washington editorialists
hoped for, the legislation quietly withered. Whenever a bipartisan
consensus on this deeply controversial issue seems close at hand,
fissures appear and ultimately nothing much happens.
It isn't just the restrictionist right, although that's the
group the president is targeting when he insists the current
immigration bill is no amnesty. Most of the leaders in both parties
want to give legal status to millions of illegal aliens. But their
specific concerns aren't identical and the fragile coalition behind
the Senate plan is threatened by its own internal
contradictions.
The bill's Republican supporters see immigration primarily as a
labor problem. They want to open legal paths for willing workers to
satisfy employers' cheap labor needs. Where the Republicans see
workers, the Democrats see voters. As a result, the Kennedy crowd
wants a generous path to citizenship, presumably in the hope that
it will satiate their demand for new Democratic voters.
The Senate immigration deal was an attempt to split the
difference. With immediate probationary status, a fairly liberal Z
visa program, and citizenship opportunities for illegal immigrants,
the Democrats get the amnesty they want. In return, the bill's
Republican backers get a guest-worker program tailored to their
specifications plus an eight-year shift away from family
reunification toward a point system that favors higher-skilled
workers.
Despite potential killer amendments from both sides, the bill so
far seems to be holding together a solid bipartisan majority in the
Senate (although we don't know for sure -- the anti-amnesty
backlash derailed plans for a rapid vote). But with a few sharp
tugs to the right or left, the whole coalition could unravel.
The bill is already being hit with a tough left-right combo in
the press. Conservative radio king Rush Limbaugh has labeled it the
"Destroy the Republican Party" Act. The New York Times
editorial page doesn't like it much better, because the path to
citizenship "is strewn with cruel conditions, including a fine --
$5,000 -- that's too steep and hurdles that are needlessly
high."
This unusual dynamic may also play out in the House. Many of the
chamber's Republicans remain committed to the enforcement-first
position. Minority Leader John Boehner has famously called the
Senate bill a "piece of s--t." But not every critic can fairly be
described as an immigration hardliner.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, the California Democrat who chairs the House
Judiciary Committee's immigration subcommittee, has criticized the
move away from "promot[ing] family values with family
reunification." Many black and Hispanic congressmen have objected
to the point system and the guest-worker program, two provisions
designed specifically to win Republican votes. "They are asking
that people coming into the country come in speaking English,
skilled, educated and fluent -- well, that is going to be a real
hurdle for people who come from very poor, underdeveloped
countries," Rep. Diane Watson, another California Democrat, told
the Washington Times.
If the Senate bill ends up causing the Congressional Hispanic
Caucus to join forces with Tom Tancredo's Congressional Immigration
Reform Caucus against the Chamber of Commerce, it will be a tough
fight.
Some senators are making the fight more likely. While
Republicans have so far failed to strengthen the border-security
triggers or the requirements for the Z visas, a few get-tough
amendments have passed. One is Sen. Lindsey Graham's proposed
mandatory minimum sentences for certain illegal border-crossers.
There are also get-soft amendments being batted around, most
notably an attempt by Democratic frontrunners Hillary Clinton and
Barack Obama to effectively delete the point system from the
bill.
In the end, all the details that allow Bush, Kennedy, and
company to abjure the amnesty label keep dooming these bipartisan
immigration pacts. This year there are many political factors that
favor the "comprehensive" approach. The cleverness of its
proponents just isn't one of them.
topics:
Barack Obama, John Boehner, Hillary Clinton, NATO, Immigration