Friday, March 12, 2010, 10:48 am
Current State of Immigration Reform: Barely Moving
March 12th, 2010 | Category: Articles, News, Policy, uscis
Today’s Wall Street Journal has a recap of recent high-level meetings and plans regarding an immigration reform, a topic which President Obama said he will tackle during his first year in office.
Washington has been busy for the past few months with health care, wars and the economic crisis. Not surprisingly, immigration reform has not been high on the President’s agenda.
A pair of senators trying to put together a comprehensive immigration bill showed their outline to President Barack Obama Thursday and asked his help in recruiting additional Senate backers. But with a full plate already and elections looming, it was unclear how involved the White House plans to get on the issue.
According to the Wall Street Journal, while President Obama remains “fully committed” to immigration reform, his administration has taken a more hands-off approach and has left Congress to propose the outline of the reform plans and to “sell” it on Capitol Hill.
The Schumer/Graham plan, proposed by Senators Charles Schumer (D-NY) and Linsay Graham (R-SC), was presented to the President. However, Sen. Graham is looking for another Republican sponsor, but has been unable to find one. Senator McCain (R-AZ) who supported a similar plan when President Bush proposed it, has not been willing to sign on.
The Schumer/Graham Plan Outline
While the Senators have not released their plan formally, it may include many of the building blocks from the last failed effort, including a path to citizenship for those here illegally, now estimated at 10.8 million people; a guest worker program; and, in a new twist, a mandatory biometric identification card for workers to stem the flow of illegal workers into the country in future years.
Immigration Reform – Slow Movement
In this political climate, it seems that immigration reform, if it happens, will move forward very slowly. The President has seemingly delegated to Congress finding support for the immigration reform, and the current political gridlock in Congress will not help. We will provide to monitor the current state of the immigration reform from our offices in Washington, DC, and provide further updates. To stay up-to-date on this and other immigration topics, please consider subscribing to our free weekly immigration newsletter.
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