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Davidd Gardner
Immigration law of the United States is more challenging today than ever. With the growing number of laws and regulations that constantly change, it is critical to have competent and proactive immigration counsel to represent you.
 
 
 
 
House Passes 3 Immigration Measures

The three approved measures allow quicker deportation and make tunneling a
crime, but they could face resistance in the Senate.

By Nicole Gaouette
Los Angeles Times
September 22, 2006

WASHINGTON — The House on Thursday approved three new bills targeting illegal
immigration, including one that would make it a crime to tunnel under the
border and another making it easier to deport gang members who are not citizens.

The action followed House approval last week of a proposed 700-mile fence
along the border with Mexico — legislation the Senate is now debating — and
passage earlier this week of a bill meant to prevent illegal immigrants from
voting.

The measures stem from the push by House Republican leaders for the federal
government to focus on securing the nation's border before dealing with other
immigration-related issues.

House Majority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) hailed Thursday's bills as
evidence that GOP lawmakers were "serious about securing our border and enforcing
our law." He said he was hopeful the bills could be on President Bush's desk
"in a matter of weeks."

But a key Republican senator cast doubt on the prospects of any of the House
measures, questioning the wisdom of enacting enforcement-oriented legislation
without grappling with the citizenship status of illegal immigrants in the
U.S. or calls by the business community for a guest worker program.

"I don't see how we can deal with the immigration issue on a piecemeal
basis," said Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Most senators have supported the more sweeping rewrite of immigration policy
endorsed by Bush. And Specter expressed concern that House leaders would have
little incentive to negotiate other immigration-related matters in the future
"if we take care of all of their priorities and none of the Senate's."

Congressional Democrats, meanwhile, emphasized their opposition to the House
approach at an annual Capitol Hill summit with Latino leaders.

"Republicans claim to be on the side of Hispanics, but their record doesn't
match their rhetoric," said Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.).

"You cannot be on the side of Hispanics, especially when you demagogue the
immigration issue, when you are refusing to support sound solutions to one of
the most pressing issues in America."

The decision by House Republicans to back border security and more aggressive
enforcement of immigration laws while eschewing talks over establishing a
guest worker program or creating a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants is
in part designed to motivate the party's conservative base in an election year.

The question among political analysts in both parties is whether the strategy
could earn the GOP short-term gains in November at the expense of the party's
longer-term fortunes. Latinos are the fastest-growing segment of the U.S.
population and are expected to make up about one-quarter of the population by
2050.

Most of the legislation that cleared the House on Thursday had been approved
previously by the chamber as part of a single bill it passed in December.

One of the new measures would authorize the indefinite detention of some
illegal immigrants, a move that would overturn two Supreme Court decisions
declaring that practice unlawful. The bill would also bar gang members from entering
the country and allow the Department of Homeland Security to quickly deport
noncitizens if it believes they are gang members.

It passed 328-95.

A second bill would speed the ability of immigration officers to deport
people and limit their access to appeal. It would strip Salvadorans of a special
immigration status that has protected many from deportation. And it would affirm
the right of state and local law enforcement to help enforce federal
immigration laws. It passed 277-140.

The third bill would impose a 20-year prison sentence on anyone who digs a
tunnel under the U.S. border. People who permit tunnel construction on their
property would earn a 10-year sentence.

The bill, identical to legislation sponsored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.), was sponsored by David Dreier (R-San Dimas) and approved unanimously,
422-0.


NEWS & EVENTS
12/28/2007 (Republicans Take Tough Line on Immigration)

06/14/2007 (Tentative agreement reached on immigration )

05/22/2007 (Senate Votes to Proceed with Floor Debate)

05/20/2007 (BREAKING NEWS - Immigration Compromise Reached.)

04/30/2007 (Hagel Introduces Legislation to Deal with Illegal Immigrants )

04/30/2007 (The White House Immigration PowerPoint)

04/30/2007 (Congressional Leaders Predict Immigration Law)

03/21/2007 (House Immigration Bill Offers Citizenship)

03/17/2007 (Advice to companies: Big changes in immigration law are coming soon.)

03/14/2007 (Hope seen in White House-GOP immigration talks)

03/12/2007 (A Self-Inflicted Wound)

03/01/2007 (How to Keep America Competitive)

02/28/2007 (Immigrants boost pay, not prison populations, new studies show)


See All The News »
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