Friday, November 22, 2013

Paul Ryan: The House Won't get 'Jammed' with the Senate Immigration Bill

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) said House Republican leaders would pursue an overhaul of the immigration system in a step-by-step process, likely beginning next year, but said lawmakers would not allow themselves to get “jammed” by a bill that passed the Senate earlier this year. 
Mr. Ryan, speaking at a Wall Street Journal CEO Council meeting, said the House would likely try to advance seven or eight bills, all dealing with immigration. He said this was in part meant as a way to avoid creating a large piece of legislation that was overly cumbersome.
“No offense to the [Obama] administration, we just don’t trust their word on this,” he said. He also said there is “literally not enough time to do it” in 2013. 
“If we are trying to cram and rush just because it’s the calendar year, we don’t think that’s responsible,” he said.
He also said he believed there were a number of House Republicans who would support the ability immigrants who entered the U.S. illegally to eventually secure citizenship. But he said the process would be burdensome and drawn out – potentially taking up to 15 years – incentivizing immigrants to enter the U.S. legally. The Senate bill, which House leaders have rejected, would provide a 13-year path to citizenship.
Read the full story HERE.

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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

There is NO way possible to incentivize legal immigration while passing out endless streams of amnesty to those who break our laws.