It’s almost invisible at this point, perceptible only through hints, trial balloons, and private exchanges between members. But it’s there: immigration reform is still alive. And if you squint just right, you might spot the distant outlines of a deal.
The most visible recent news doesn’t look too encouraging. Long-running talks between a bipartisan group of House members collapsed this month as two Republicans abandoned them.
But reformers are hoping that the talks’ demise merely reflects the reality that House GOP leaders must ultimately decide the path forward. And on that front, there have been some encouraging signs. Most of those come from Congressman Bob Goodlatte, chair of the Judiciary committee and general GOP point man on the issue, who has said repeatedly since recess that Republicans are looking at a bill to legalize the 11 million existing undocumented immigrants and that he intends to push for votes on some immigration legislation as early as October.
“I’m happy that he says that he’s moving forward, that he’s looking for a bill that can go to conference,” Democratic Congressman Luis Gutierrez of Illinois told reporters on Thursday. “That is a step in the right direction.”
Gutierrez and another Democrat, Henry Cuellar of Texas, said they met with Goodlatte last week and were encouraged by his apparent enthusiasm for advancing immigration reform. Cuellar told reporters that Goodlatte asked for his help in selling a compromise to Democrats. But Cuellar added that he and Gutierrez have yet to hear any details about the potential breakthrough offer Goodlatte’s considering.
That proposal, per Goodlatte, would go something like this. Undocumented immigrants would get permission to live and work in the country if they met certain requirements. But, except perhaps for some who arrived as children, they would neither be eligible for a special “path to citizenship” nor would they be blocked from applying for a green card and eventual citizenship through existing channels.
Immigration advocacy groups and pro-reform lawmakers have steadfastly maintained that a path to citizenship is an absolute necessity in any final bill. But many are intrigued by Goodlatte’s still-vague framework.
Gutierrez and Cuellar, for example, both noted that the Senate bill, which is widely embraced by reformers, already would bar over 3 million undocumented immigrants from the legalization process. There may be some wiggle room for advocates depending on how far off Goodlatte’s idea falls.
“Whatever fight we engage in today will not be the end fight,” Gutierrez said when asked about the Goodlatte suggestion. “If tomorrow the president were to sign the Senate bill as it is currently constructed, we would all have a responsibility the next day to fight for those who were left out.”
The trouble now is that, without an actual draft, it’s impossible to gauge how appetizing Goodlatte’s “no special pathway to citizenship” proposal is to Democrats and pro-immigration groups.
Right now only 5,000 low-skill visas are available to Mexican immigrants annually and family categories are backed up for years. In addition, many undocumented immigrants are married to American citizens but can’t get legal status and citizenship because they’re blocked by a prior deportation or illegal border crossing. Under those conditions, the number of immigrants who gain citizenship through a legalization-only scheme might be extremely low.
“The number of years it takes to get everyone through a system like that are debatable, but some say 30, 40, 50, even 60 years if you’re low priority,” Becky Talent, director of immigration policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, told MSNBC.









