Senate Parliamentarian blocks immigration reforms that would’ve benefited Indian immigrants in the U.S
Democrats’ attempt to provide a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants largely comprising Indians, who came to the US with their parents as young kids, as part of budget reconciliation has been unsuccessful as they failed to get the support from Senate Parlimenarian Elizabeth MacDonough.
Senate Democrats hit a major roadblock on Sunday in their effort to allow millions of immigrants to legally stay in the United States, after the Senate Parliamentarian ruled against attaching the measure to a $3.5 trillion spending bill, lawmakers said, Reuters reported.
According to the report, the provision aimed to give a path to citizenship for millions, including so-called Dreamer immigrants, brought to the United States as children, who are protected from deportation under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.
Farmworkers, essential workers and immigrants with temporary protected status, which gives work permits and deportation relief to those hailing from nations hit by violence or natural disasters, also stood to benefit, the report said.
Democrats were “deeply disappointed in this decision but the fight to provide lawful status for immigrants in budget reconciliation continues,” Reuters reported quoting a statement of Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer.
Senate Democrats have prepared alternate proposals and aimed to hold further meetings with the Senate parliamentarian, Schumer added, Reuters reported.
According to the report, legislative remedy has become all the more pressing since a July court ruling that struck down DACA, which now protects around 640,000 young immigrants.
“We fully expect our partners in the Senate to come back with alternative immigration-related proposals for the parliamentarian to consider,” Reuters report said quoting a White House spokesperson. Sunday’s ruling was “deeply disappointing,” he added.
On Twitter, Senator Chuck Grassley, the Judiciary Committee’s top Republican, praised the parliamentarian’s ruling, saying, “Mass amnesty for millions of illegal immigrants isn’t a budgetary issue appropriate for reconciliation.”
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said, “Democrats will not be able to stuff their most radical amnesty proposals into the reckless taxing and spending spree they are assembling behind closed doors.”
An estimate in Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough’s ruling, obtained by Reuters, showed the step would have helped about 8 million people become lawful permanent residents, including about 7 million now deemed to infringe the law.
MacDonough said that if the reform were allowed to proceed in a budget bill a future Senate could then rescind anyone’s immigration status on the basis of a majority vote.
That would be a “stunning development … and is further evidence that the policy changes of this proposal far outweigh the budgetary impact scored to it,” she added.
“It is not appropriate for inclusion in reconciliation.”
Lawful permanent status allows people to work, travel, live openly in U.S. society and become eligible, in time, to apply for citizenship, MacDonough said.
As the Senate’s parliamentarian, MacDonough, in the job since 2012 under both Republicans and Democrats, advises lawmakers about what is acceptable under the chamber’s rules and precedents, sometimes with lasting consequences.
Chosen by the Senate majority leader, the holder of the job is expected to be non-partisan.
Early this year, MacDonough barred inclusion of a minimum wage hike in a COVID-19 aid bill.
Most U.S. Senate bills require support from 60 of the 100 members to go to a vote. Budget reconciliation measures, however, can clear the chamber on a simple majority vote, in which case Vice President Kamala Harris could break the tie.
The proposed designation of essential workers covered 18 major categories and more than 220 sub-categories of employment, MacDonough said in the ruling.
DACA beneficiaries receive work authorization, access to driver’s licenses and better access, for some, to financial aid for education, but not a path to citizenship.
The law protects primarily young Hispanic adults born in Mexico and countries in Central and South America who were brought to the United States as children.