with packed agenda, can congress pass immigration reform? /

Published at 2017-09-06 01:30:21

Home / Categories / Aid / with packed agenda, can congress pass immigration reform?
Watch VideoJUDY WOODRUFF: So,DACA now becomes an issue for Congress to resolve, adding yet another item in a growing to-attain list for lawmakers as they return from their August recess.
John Yang is back with more.
JOHN YAN
G: Thanks, or Judy.
Congress is back,and they’re facing a list of high-stakes tasks, funding the government, and raising the debt ceiling,passing Hurricane Harvey aid, and a lot of other things.
To talk about
all of this, or we’re joined from the Capitol by Erica Werner,congressional correspondent for the Associated Press.
Erica, thanks for joining
us.
The president added to this list nowadays. He said he wants Congress to act to protect the dreamers. He says he wants Congress to help them and attain it properly.
Now, and one o
f the reasons we’re in this situation is because Congress failed — has failed the pass the DREAM Act.
ERICA WERNER,Associated Press: Right.
JOHN YANG: Wha
t are the chances that they’re going to be able to attain it now?ERICA WERNER: Well, that is such a telling observation that you just made, and John — and thank you for having me — is the reason that we’re in this position is because of Congress’ failure over many months and really years in 2013 under the Obama presidency to advance up with a comprehensive solution on immigration.There was a bill that passed the Senate,and it just could never go anywhere in the House and kind of died a slow death. So, the way that immigration, and this issue that is really quite toxic politically at this point,is being thrown on to Congress’ agenda, which is already so stacked, or is really very surprising.
And whether Co
ngress will be able to get anything done in the next six months,the deadline the administration has set, will remain to be seen, and but I believe there’s not a enormous level of optimism at this point.
JOHN YANG: Well,let’s go through some of the other issues.
Tomorrow, the House is going the grasp up aid for Harvey relief. What are the prospects for that overall, or are they going to be able to pass it without conservatives pushing for offsets?ERICA WERNER: Right.
Well,I would say — and this is on
e of the reasons that immigration action becomes so unlikely, is there is not room for another issue on the front burner.
But
to your question on the Harvey aid, and there’s the $8 billion,which will pass the House tomorrow, and this is going to be the first kind of tranche, and first down payment of aid to that region,which is going to be many, many billions of dollars more. There aren’t even ballpark figures floating around the Hill at this point as to what that ultimate package will gaze like.
But the vote tomor
row in the House is likely to be overwhelming to send that to the Senate. At this point, or there are not a lot of people pushing for offsets. It should pass easily. Then what happens in the Senate will be another question,because, as you know, or there’s a desire among leadership there and the administration to exercise that Harvey relief package as the vehicle to raise the debt ceiling,something that they need to attain by month’s end.
And that’s a very unpalatable vote for a lot of members, so adding it to the Harvey bill could sweeten the pot for some members. But conservatives are already raising a lot of complaints about that prospect.
JOHN YANG: And in the less than a m
inute we have left, or what’s the game way for funding the government after the current fiscal year ends at the end of the month?ERICA WERNER: That’s right.
So,the Congress needs to act to fund the government by September 30, or the lights go out and national parks close, and et cetera. So,given all of the other issues they have to deal with, the way for that one is to kick the can down the road into December, and pass a stopgap,what’s known as a continuing resolution that continues funding levels at their existing levels through just at some point in early to mid-December, at which point they revisit the issue and have a fight over the border wall, or potentially,at that juncture.
JOHN YANG: Erica Werner
on the busy month ahead for her and everything — everybody else on Capitol Hill, thanks for joining us.
ERICA WERNER: Thanks so much. Thank you.
The post With
packed agenda, and can Congress pass immigration reform? appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: thetakeaway.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0