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Congress to Debate Illegal Immigration
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, March 2, 2006

WASHINGTON -- The seemingly impossible task of finding a way to tighten borders against illegal immigrants while maintaining a flow of low-wage workers for U.S. businesses gets under way in Congress, pitting two Republican bases against each other.

The House managed to pass a border security bill last year - pleasing conservatives clamoring for an immigration crackdown. But that came only after House leaders beat back an attempt by some GOP members to include President Bush's proposal for a temporary worker program.

In contrast, the Senate is wading right into the thorny guest worker issue.

Debate was starting Thursday with the Senate Judiciary Committee taking up an immigration reform bill drafted by the committee's chairman, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa.

Specter told fellow senators in advance that the bill is "a framework for building a consensus."

Bush called for a temporary worker proposal in January 2004, but the proposal got bogged down in election-year politics.

With the business lobby pressing on the issue, Bush has renewed his call for temporary visas for workers.

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Pressure to move forward intensified this week as governors meeting in Washington said they consider immigration one of their major concerns and made them an agenda item in their private meetings with Bush and his Cabinet.

Specter's plan would allow immigrants who entered this country before Jan. 4, 2004 and who have jobs to participate for up to six years in the temporary worker program.

The bill and another proposed by Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas, and Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., would force workers to return to their countries of origin if they want to become permanent legal U.S. residents.

The Cornyn-Kyl legislation goes further than Specter's and mandates that illegal immigrants leave the country within five years.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., has been promoting his own immigration reform proposal in town halls around the country. His bill has the backing of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, other business groups, immigration advocates and some labor unions.

His bill, co-authored by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., would penalize employers who hire illegal workers but allows immigrants participating in the temporary worker program to work toward eligibility for legal permanent residence.

"I have serious concerns about Senator Specter's proposal and I hope that we can improve it," Kennedy said at a rally of immigration workers Wednesday.

Some Republicans, however, want to toughen up Specter's bill. Alabama Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions said Specter's proposal is "like someone trying to leap a 10-foot ravine and going 9 feet."

"It just doesn't get there on law enforcement," Sessions said.

He said the upcoming immigration debate will be a test for Congress on whether it wants immigration law enforced. He's expected to offer some amendments to Specter's bill, including one to allow local law officers to enforce immigration law.

Presidential politics is an undercurrent in the debate. Majority Leader Bill Frist, McCain and Nebraska Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel, who has pushed immigration legislation to provide a steady supply of workers for the agriculture industry, are considered potential 2008 presidential candidates.

Frist told several key senators early last month that he planned to take up immigration on the Senate floor March 27, leaving open the possibility that he might offer his own immigration bill if the Judiciary Committee did not yet have a consensus bill.

© 2006 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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