House passes $694 million border bill
The vote was almost
entirely on party lines, 223- 189, with just one Democrat, Texas Rep
Henry Cuellar, voting for it. Four Republicans opposed the legislation.
The Democratic-led Senate
had already left Washington to start a five week summer recess after it
was unable to pass its own legislation to give the President some of
the money he's requested to address the massive influx of migrants at
the southwest border.
At a news conference
Friday, President Barack Obama dismissed the House GOP measure as "a
message bill" and vowed to veto if it came across his desk.
The vote came one day
after a chaotic scene on Capitol Hill when House Speaker John Boehner
was forced to abruptly pull an earlier version of the bill because it
didn't have sufficient votes to pass.
Some conservatives didn't like the
price tag of the legislation and others demanded tougher restrictions
on a separate bill that would halt future deportations of some child
immigrants who arrived years earlier.
House GOP leaders had
already agreed to hold a separate vote on that measure, modeled on a
plan from conservative Texas GOP Senator Ted Cruz, which would prevent
Obama from continuing his policy known as "DACA." Under DACA, the
administration can defer deportations of children brought to the U.S.
illegally by their parents.
But conservatives wanted
to end that policy, fearing that the President would use his executive
authority to expand deportation deferments.
After a late night of negotiations on Thursday, GOP leaders agreed to the demand.
The House passed that
bill Friday, 216-192, after a heated and ugly floor debate. Democrats
accused the GOP of being "anti-Hispanic" and "extreme" -- a message the
party will certainly repeat over and over before the midterm elections.
Brushing off the
accusations that both bills were just political theater, House
Republicans worked all day to lock down the votes from their members.
They believed passing legislation right before they left for the break
would flip the narrative -- instead of being the party that did nothing,
they could claim they stayed and approved a plan while the Democrats
who run the Senate left town without any action on the issue.
"The people's House is
here working and we're not going to stop working until we pass
legislation that actually addresses this crisis," Louisiana Republican
Rep Steve Scalise said.
House Democrats said the Republicans would only make the situation worse.
Rep Luis Gutierrez,
D-Illinois, warned the House Republicans legislation would cause the
600,000 so-called "Dreamers' to be deported and said, "Republicans want
to kill DACA and kill it quietly on a Friday night."
But Rep Bob Goodlatte,
R-Virginia, said that the President's move "to use his pen and cell
phone to legislate" and allow children stay in the country violated the
Constitution because it was up to Congress to pass new laws.
An additional $35
million was added to the bill to reimburse the state of Texas for
deploying its National Guard troops to the border. The measure that
passed Friday also included a change to a 2008 anti-trafficking law to
make it easier to send home the unaccompanied children from Central
American countries.
Republicans criticized
Obama for sending mixed messages to Congress on modifying that law. The
President and some in his administration indicated they could support a
bill to expedite deportations of children coming from Guatemala,
Honduras and El Salvador, but then backed off after Congressional
Democrats strongly opposed linking that with additional border money.
Without any agreement on additional resources to address the border crisis, Obama said Friday, "we've run out of money."
Three weeks ago, Obama
had asked Congress for $3.7 billion in emergency funds to help process
the unaccompanied children at the border and boost border security. The
Senate Democrats' plan called for $2.7 billion, but it failed to
advance.
The President said
Friday he would reallocate money to ensure federal agencies providing
housing or holding immigration hearings could continue to handle the
increased activity along the border in Texas.
I commented on this once, but now it is gone. I will assume I posted incorrectly somehow!
ReplyDeleteIf posts are deleted, some explanation should accompany the post so that the poster knows what he did wrong.
I will give a shorter reply:
I am frankly tired of being called anti-Hispanic because I believe the illegals should not be allowed in this country. Because they are carrying numerous dangerous diseases that are harmful not only to all Americans, they are even harmful to Obama and should not be allowed in this country.
I think it was wrong for Obama to allow people with Ebola into our country. Since he was so magnanimous, why doesn’t he host the Ebola patients in the White House!
That was the essence of what I said, but I was not in a polite mood.
YES, you must have posted wrong as I did NOT take anything down.
DeleteBTW, I agree with all you said.
DeleteThanks for replying as that helps me to know it was not deleted! Sometimes I read things on the computer that make me explode!
ReplyDeleteI work with educated people.
I have a co-worker who is very well educated; the guy has a PhD in Math, but he buys into all the liberal gibberish from MSNBC. I’m telling you no matter what I say I cannot convince him conservatives are not racist Neanderthals.
I notice one thing that shut that idiot up the other day: I said we needed to seal the border because of all the bad diseases coming over with the illegals, and he called that racist. I then reminded him of all the money that was going to be spent on the illegals and how that money could be better spent on the poor African-American children on the south side of Chicago. (I don’t really believe that, but it sure shuts a liberal up!) I said: there are many children in our own country who are going hungry right now that need the food going to the illegals (that shut him up!)
Had I said there are veterans getting second rate hospital care he would have probably said hooray! However, since I used one of his own pet minorities, I shut his conversation down.
He is a typical white liberal who buys into all that liberal gibberish.
I said the guy was a liberal…well…there are PLENTY of people who think like you, and Craig, and I do on these matters.
Obama is leading us (America) down a dangerous path! I do believe they are the enemy of the America we know and love.
I'll try not to explode on your blog, but sometime the articles drive me over the edge. HA HA.