For months, conservative opponents of immigration reform have been looking for ways to slow down the process—with little success. But with two ethnic Chechen immigrants the suspects in last week’s Boston Marathon bombings, they may finally have given them an opening.
The suspected bombers, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, came to the U.S. legally as minors in 2002 and their family was later granted asylum status. In 2012, Dzhokhar, 19, became a U.S. citizen. Tamerlan was killed in a shootout with police early Friday morning. Dzhokhar was arrested Friday evening.
Sen. Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican, seized on the bombings as a reason to go slow at the first hearing for the comprehensive bipartisan immigration reform bill introduced in the Senate last week.
“Given the events of this week, it’s important for us to understand the gaps and loopholes in our immigration system,” Grassley said Friday in his opening statement.
Sen. Dan Coats, an Indiana Republican, echoed that go-slow approach in an appearance Sunday on ABC News. “I’m afraid we’ll rush to some judgments relative to immigration and how it’s processed,” said Coats. “So let’s do it in a rational way rather than an emotional way.”
Conservative pundits have been blunter in using the bombings as an argument against immigration reform. “It’s too bad Suspect #1 won’t be able to be legalized by Marco Rubio, now,” Ann Coulter tweeted Friday.
The effort to tie the two issues led to a heated exchange at Monday’s immigration hearing. “Those who point to the terrible tragedy in Boston as, I would say, an excuse for not doing a bill or delaying it many months or year—” said Sen. Chuck Schumer, before being interrupted by Grassley.
“I never said that!” shouted the Iowa senator. “I never said that!”
Schumer, a New York Democrat, is a member of the bipartisan “Gang of Eight” that wrote the reform bill.
For conservative Republicans, opposing immigration reform has until lately been a delicate task. After President Obama captured more than 70%t of the Hispanic vote last fall, an official party post-mortem urged the GOP to get behind reform as a way to bolster their standing with Hispanics. And Sen. Marco Rubio, a rising GOP star and potential 2016 presidential contender, has helped lead the effort to draft legislation. All that has made it tricky to voice full-throated opposition to reform, and has given the push a sense of momentum. But those wary of reform appear to hope that the bombings will complicate the picture, making it harder to loosen immigration laws at a time when terrorism concerns are at the forefront of Americans’ minds.
Whether they’ll succeed is very much an open question. Frank Sharry, the executive director of America’s Voice Education Fund, a pro-reform group, pointed out that those pointing to the attacks as a reason to slow-roll immigration reform were against the effort even before the bombings.









