Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, discusses a bipartisan immigration proposal announced on Monday as (from left) Sen. Chuck Schumer D-N.Y., Sen. Dick Durbin D-Ill. , and Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J.look on.
USA TODAY
WASHINGTON (USA TODAY) -- As President Obama prepares to lay out his immigration
plan during a speech in Las Vegas on Tuesday, a group of bipartisan
senators has reached agreement on a framework to overhaul the nation's
immigration system.
The deal was announced at a press conference
Monday at the U.S. Capitol. The plan addresses border security, the
ability of businesses to check immigration status and a streamlined
process for future immigrants to enter the United States. It also opens a
path to citizenship for the 11 million illegal immigrants currently
living in the country.
ANALYSIS: Immigration proposal may face resistance in House
The
next few months will feature heated disagreements in the divided
Congress over the details of each of those proposals. But the senators'
announcement is another indication that the elusive issue of
immigration, which has not been significantly addressed since the Reagan
administration, may finally be in line for an overhaul.
Obama
defeated Republican Mitt Romney among Hispanic voters by 71%-27%,
according to surveys of 2012 voters as they left polling places.
Hispanics are the fastest growing part of the electorate, and some
Republicans worry about their future electoral prospects unless the
party improves its standing with Latinos.
"Look at the last election," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaking Sunday on ABC's This Week.
"We are losing dramatically the Hispanic vote, which we think should be
ours, for a variety of reasons, and we've got to understand that."
The
eight senators who have forged the agreement are Democrats Charles
Schumer of New York, Dick Durbin of Illinois, Robert Menendez of New
Jersey and Michael Bennet of Colorado; and Republicans McCain, Lindsey
Graham of South Carolina, Marco Rubio of Florida and Jeff Flake of
Arizona.
The group is a mix of seasoned veterans such as McCain,
who worked with the late Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy on a failed
immigration plan in 2007, and newcomers such as Rubio, a 41-year-old
freshman and potential presidential candidate in 2016.
The biggest
hurdle facing any immigration overhaul is the Republican-led House of
Representatives. For the past two years, Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas,
chaired the Judiciary Committee and described any attempt to legalize
the nation's illegal immigrants as "amnesty." He blasted Obama in June
when the president announced that the administration would defer the
deportations of young illegal immigrants.
But House committee
leaders have since changed, and it's unclear what kind of reception the
Senate plan will receive in the House.
TEXT: Immigration proposal
"The
speaker welcomes the work of leaders like Sen. Rubio on this issue, and
is looking forward to learning more about the proposal in the coming
day," said Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner.
Rep.
Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., has been working on a bipartisan version of
an immigration plan with some of his House colleagues for years and was
supportive of the plan laid out by the senators.
"Reasonable
people who want to get this done will reach very similar conclusions,
and that's what you're seeing everywhere and this reflects that," he
said. "I'm very pleased to see that."
But Mark Krikorian,
executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, a
Washington-based group that opposes a path to citizenship, said
Republicans will be "crushed" in the 2014 elections if Congress passes
anything close to the Senate plan.
"The Republicans will lose the
House in 2014 because why would Republicans come out to vote for people
who supported something like this?" he said. "It would be as though a
Republican House enacted a legislative version of Roe v. Wade."
According
to the five-page draft of the proposal, the eight senators have crafted
a "comprehensive" bill that would address most of the areas troubling
legislators.
The plan says that the border must be secured and an
employment verification system - a process that allows business owners
to screen the immigration status of prospective employees - before the
nation can address the status of illegal immigrants living in the
country.
Rubio told a conservative radio host last week that there
would be "triggers" put into the bill that would need to be met before
moving on.
"In essence, none of that other stuff with regards to
getting in line and applying, none of that happens until we have been
able to certify that indeed the workplace security thing is in place,
the visa tracking is in place, and there is some level of significant
operational control of the border," Rubio said Wednesday on The Mark Levin Show.
The
plan then allows people illegally living in the country to apply for
legal status. After passing a background check, paying back taxes,
learning English and civics and establishing a work record, they would
be placed in the back of the line of people who have already applied to
come to the U.S.
But
the plan provides some exceptions to all those requirements. Illegal
immigrants brought to the country as children - called "DREAM" students
after a failed bill that would give them legal status - and people who
have been working in the country's agricultural fields will have a
different process to go through.
"Due to the utmost importance in
our nation maintaining the safety of its food supply, agricultural
workers who commit to the long term stability of our nation's
agricultural industries will be treated differently than the rest of the
undocumented population because of the role they play in ensuring that
Americans have safe and secure agricultural products to sell and
consume," the draft reads.
The plan also changes the way we grant
visas to both low-skilled and high-skilled immigrants, calling the
process "insurmountably difficult for well-meaning immigrants."
People
who obtain advanced degrees in the so-called STEM fields - science,
technology, engineering and mathematics - would have more access to
green cards. And the nation would alter its guest-worker program to
allow more people to enter for low-skilled work.