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Squarehard

Member
Oct 27, 2017
25,895
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/whats-...immigration-bills-and-how-will-this-play-out/
Republicans' efforts to overhaul immigration isn't going as smoothly as they hoped. After a vote on the more conservative of two GOP proposals failed Thursday, a vote on the more moderate "compromise" bill was pushed off to Friday — and then possibly to next week.

House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, R-Louisiana, told reporters Thursday evening that more issues need to be worked out before the House takes up a vote, after House Republicans met to discuss the matter Thursday afternoon. Asked if the House will take up a vote on the compromise bill Friday, Scalise said, "right now we're going to keep working with our members."
While both bills were originated by Republicans, one is generally considered the more "conservative" bill, authored by retiring Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Virginia. The other bill, the "compromise" or "moderate" bill, comes from Republican leadership. President Trump has, through White House officials, expressed his support for both pieces of legislation.

Asked Thursday what happens if both immigration votes fail, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan said, "We'll cross that bridge if we get to it."
In a press conference on Thursday, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi called the compromise bill a "compromise with the devil."

"It's not a compromise," Pelosi said. "It may be a compromise with the devil, but it's not a compromise with the Democrats in terms of what they have in their bill. Their bills are anti-family, perpetuate child detention, undermine existing protections, cut off many people who have been waiting lawfully to enter the country."

On Capitol Hill Thursday, a wave of protests against the "zero tolerance" policy broke out, with dozens of children, parents and religious leaders gathered in the Russell Rotunda to speak out against the separation of children from their parents.
Key differences between the two bills:
On the matter of family separation — which the Trump administration is halting for now — the conservative bill allows children to be detained with their parents in Department of Homeland Security custody for longer than 20 days by giving DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen "discretion" to do so. The compromise bill goes a step further, by allowing children to be detained with their parents, and mandating that DHS house families who are going through criminal proceedings for first-time border crossings rather than turn them over to the Justice Department, as is current policy, CBS News' Rebecca Kaplan reports. The compromise bill would also provide funding for detention centers.
On DACA — The conservative bill allows for current recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program to apply for a three-year renewable legal status allowing them to work and travel overseas. DACA recipients must use existing pathways to get green cards. The compromise bill allows those who qualified for DACA under the 2012 standards to apply for a six-year, indefinitely renewable legal status. They can also apply for the merit-based visa program without going to their home country first.
Visas — The conservative bill eliminates the diversity lottery and family visas for relatives other than spouses and minor children. It would also increase visas for skilled workers. The compromise bill creates a new, merit-based green card system with points for education, employment, English proficiency and military service by eliminating the diversity lottery and family visas for married children of U.S. citizens, and for siblings of adult U.S. citizens. It also eliminates per-country caps for employment-based immigration.
Border security — The conservative bill authorizes construction of the border wall, technology and other infrastructure. It also adds 5,000 border patrol agents and 5,000 Customs and Border Protection officers, and a biometric entry-exit system. The compromise bill appropriates $25 billion in advance for border security funding for the wall, access and roads, and also includes the addition of a biometric entry-exist system.
Overall immigration levels — The conservative bill would reduce overall immigration levels by about 25 percent per year. The compromise bill would keep immigration bills level.

Compromise me if old.
 

UltimateHigh

Member
Oct 25, 2017
15,500
Compromise? Fuck off.

Stop separating kids from parents and go straight to hell with any inclination of indefinite detention.

Full stop.
 

5taquitos

Member
Oct 27, 2017
12,893
OR
I guess I should be grateful that they're so incompetent despite the fact that the party has control of literally every branch of government.
 

WedgeX

Member
Oct 27, 2017
13,200
The two bills are exactly what Trump wants - more border security and reduced immigration in exchange for child hostages.

Both plans can fuck right off.
 

metalslimer

Avenger
Oct 25, 2017
9,566
Thank God both will fail

Republicans had their chance in 2013-14 to pass an actual compromise bill.
 

Ribs

Member
Dec 10, 2017
487
Nothing says we love legal immigrants like cutting legal immigration by 25%.
 

antonz

Banned
Oct 25, 2017
5,309
Republicans always say how Democrats never want to solve anything. Yet their DACA solution is literally lets not solve anything and instead in a few years recreate the crisis
 

bsigg

Member
Oct 25, 2017
22,556
When you control majorities in Congress and the POTUS is in your party and you can't pull together a bill every single Republican has been screaming at the top of their lungs for for the last 12 years you know there's a major fucking problem with who you have leading.
 

Aaron

I’m seeing double here!
Member
Oct 25, 2017
18,077
Minneapolis
If Ryan and his ilk were really interested in passing anything, they would be willing to work with Democrats.

They are the Dick Dastardly of politics. They would always win if they didn't keep stopping to cheat every time they found themselves in the lead.