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Senate Judiciary Committee sets another markup session for March 27

May adopt provisions from Kennedy-McCain bill

Frist also introduces bill

Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 20, Issue 1, March 23, 2006


     A flurry of activity in recent weeks by the Senate committee responsible for immigration reform legislation and by the majority leader ensures that the full Senate will consider immigration reform when it reconvenes at the end of March.  But exactly which bill it will consider remains an open question. 

     March 16, 2006, was the last day scheduled for the Judiciary Committee's markup of the immigration reform proposal introduced by its chairperson, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA):  the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006, also referred to as the "chairman's mark."  (For a description of the bill, see "Senate Judiciary Committee Considering Flawed Immigration Bill," www.nilc.org/immlawpolicy/CIR/cir005.htm.)  The chairman's mark includes many immigration enforcement provisions and concepts taken directly out of HR 4437, the punitive and extreme proposal that was introduced by House Judiciary Chair F. James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R‑WI) and passed by the House last December.  But unlike HR 4437, Specter's bill would set up a huge new guest worker program to regulate the future flow of immigrant workers, and it would also establish a new "nonimmigrant conditional worker" status for undocumented workers who have lived and worked in the U.S. since Jan. 4, 2004.  However, Specter's bill does not provide a pathway to permanent lawful status for nonimmigrant conditional workers or for those who would enter the country under the new guest worker program, except that it does provide for a modest expansion in the number of permanent resident visas available under the "other worker" category.  The impact of this minor increase would be negligible, as workers who might qualify for permanent residence under this program would have to wait decades before they could obtain their green cards.

     The Judiciary Committee first met on March 2 to begin its markup work, and by March 16 it had already held five sessions devoted to the task.  The committee's tight schedule was the result of a promise by Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) that the full Senate would begin consideration of immigration reform on March 27.  Frist warned that if a bill did not emerge from the Judiciary Committee by then, he would offer his own bill, which was expected to be tilted heavily towards enforcement.

     In the course of marking up Specter's bill, Judiciary Committee members (primarily the Republicans) filed hundreds of amendments, most of which had not yet been formally offered or voted on by March 16.  Many observers of this process believe that Republicans on the committee who opposed the original bill's temporary worker and conditional worker provisions filed the amendments as a clock-running ploy intended to prevent the committee from completing its work in time for the bill to be considered by the full Senate on March 27.  This would ensure that the Frist bill would be the one considered by the Senate.  Committee action was indeed slowed by the sheer number of amendments, as well as by the chair's postponement of votes on amendments that might ameliorate harsh provisions of the bill.  The committee's work also was slowed by the lack at critical points of a quorum, which is required for voting to take place, due generally to the absence of Democrats. 

     At the March 16 markup session, the committee unexpectedly agreed to meet again on March 27 to vote on compromise language that has yet to be written but that was described in general terms.  Committee staff announced the outlines of an agreement between Sens. Edward Kennedy (D-MA) and John Cornyn (R-TX) covering temporary workers.  Under the plan, workers outside the U.S. could apply for a two-year temporary worker visa.  At the end of that visa's term, they would have to leave the country for a year, after which they could apply for a three-year visa, which could be renewed once.  Employers could petition for permanent resident status for an employee at any time during the term of the initial three-year visa.  An employee could petition for permanent residence on his or her own after the end of the first year of the second three-year visa's term.  The requirement that workers return to their home countries after the two-year visa expires could be waived if the employer established that the worker was a "critical employee" whose departure would hurt the employer's business.

     What would be done about the millions of undocumented workers already in the U.S. remained unclear after the March 16 markup session.  When the committee reconvenes on March 27, the temporary worker and permanent status provisions of the Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act (S 1033, sponsored by Sens. Kennedy and John McCain, R‑AZ) are expected to be offered as a substitute to the temporary worker and conditional worker portions of the chairman's mark.  (For more detail on these provisions of the McCain-Kennedy bill, see "An Analysis of the Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act of 2005.") Specter has, however, circulated an amendment that would add to the McCain-Kennedy provisions a "sense of the Senate" statement that those who are currently undocumented should not be able to obtain lawful permanent residence status before people who are currently waiting for family- or work-based visas or adjustment of status.  Committee staff will reportedly work on incorporating this feature into the McCain-Kennedy provisions that may be substituted for the chairman's mark's temporary and conditional worker provisions before March 27. 

     Even if the Judiciary Committee is able to agree on a bill containing provisions for temporary workers or a pathway to legalization for undocumented immigrants in the U.S., the bill will likely also contain many enforcement provisions that are anathema to immigrants' rights advocates.  Such a bill is also likely to be the target of many amendments on the Senate floor to delete the provisions that would allow undocumented people to eventually obtain legal status and to make the enforcement provisions even more harsh.

     Despite the fact that the Judiciary Committee appeared to be making progress, and without waiting to see whether it would meet his March 27 deadline, Frist took preemptive action and introduced his enforcement-only bill on March 16.  His Securing America's Borders Act (S 2454) contains many of the same provisions included in the chairman's mark, including those relating to enforcement, highly skilled immigrants, and limitations on noncitizens' access to review by the federal courts of decisions made by immigration authorities, immigration judges, or the Board of Immigration Appeals.  However, the Frist bill contains no provisions for a temporary worker program or a path to lawful status for undocumented immigrants already in the U.S.  The bill also includes enforcement amendments adopted by the Judiciary Committee in the markup sessions held before March 16, including provisions to build a fence along the Arizona section of the U.S.-Mexico border; increase Border Patrol personnel; give state and local police the authority to enforce federal criminal immigration laws; authorize the inputting of names of certain noncitizens into the National Crime Information Center database, including people who are not actually wanted by immigration authorities, such as asylum-seekers and applicants for cancellation of removal; expand mandatory detention; and require that expedited removal be applied to many immigrants not currently subject to that procedure.

     Frist has previously stated that he will not allow bills to come to the Senate floor unless they have been approved by a majority of the Republicans on a committee.  So it remains unclear whether he will permit floor consideration of a Judiciary Committee bill if it has not garnered approval by a majority of the committee's Republicans.  Nor is it clear whether he will permit consideration of a bill approved by a majority of the entire Judiciary Committee that provides a pathway to lawful status for undocumented persons currently in the U.S.  Under Senate Rule 14, the majority leader may bypass a committee-approved bill and offer his own bill instead. 

     A bill passed by the Senate will likely go to a House-Senate conference committee to be reconciled with HR 4437.  House leaders remain adamantly opposed to proposals that would create a new guest worker program or legalize the status of undocumented people currently in the country, so it is unclear whether reconciliation between the two bills would be possible should the final Senate bill contain guest worker and legalization provisions.  Given the current political climate, any final agreement reached by both houses of Congress is likely to contain many of HR 4437's extreme enforcement provisions.

By Joan Friedland, NILC immigration policy attorney
friedland@nilc.org

 

 

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