Senate GOP demands immigration reform be added to Israel, Ukraine aid
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See who else is reporting on this story and which side of the political spectrum they lean. To read other sources, click on the plus signs below. Learn more about this dataAt least 41 Senate Republicans say they’ll refuse to proceed on an Israel, Ukraine funding package if it doesn’t also strengthen security at the US southern border. That, combined with House Republicans’ border and immigration reform demands, means a serious compromise will be necessary to get those three measures approved together.
“I’m not going to vote for a package that doesn’t address the out of control nature of our border,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told reporters.
President Biden sent Congress a $106 billion dollar funding request that includes: $61.4 billion for Ukraine, $14.3 billion for Israel and $13.6 billion for border protection.
Senate Republicans released a border related proposal, largely based on the House Republican border and immigration bill, that they said needs to be included if they’re going to support the president’s package.
The one page proposal:
- Creates a safe third country requirement for asylum seekers, meaning if they crossed through another safe country before they got to America without applying there first, they are ineligible for asylum.
- Raises the “credible fear of persecution” asylum standard from “significant possibility” to “more likely than not”.
- requires that DHS keep families together in custody while charges for illegally crossing the border are pending. They say this will deter people from bringing children with them in order to get released from custody faster.
“This is about controlling the border before we get attacked. So they let this get out of hand. There’s not going to be any DACA, anything like that, because that will incentivize more people to come,” Graham said.
Senator Schumer opposed the Republican’s proposal and said they need to meet Democrats half way.
“They know full well that what they came up with is a non-starter. Instead of putting together common sense border policies that can pass in divided government, Senate Republicans basically copied and pasted large chunks of the House’s radical HR-2 bill,” Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said.
Republicans contend the president’s request is designed to speed up processing for immigrants who are already here, not reduce the number of immigrants who are crossing.