First they were eight. Then seven. Now five, en route to zero.
A year-long negotiation among a bipartisan group of seven House members on a comprehensive immigration bill broke down on Friday as two Republican members announced they would no longer participate in talks. Congressman Sam Johnson and John Carter, both of Texas, said they were dropping out because they feared President Obama wouldn’t properly implement their plans for new border security measures.
“The bottom line is–the American people do not trust the President to enforce laws, and we don’t either,” the two said in a joint statement.
Members of the group had said for months they were close to releasing a legislative package that reportedly included a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants–although one lengthier than the Senate’s bipartisan bill. But talks stalled in June over how to handle health benefits for immigrants, prompting Republican Congressman Raul Labrador of Idaho to abandon the group, which began with eight members. Johnson and Carter’s departure puts it to five, but effectively means talks are dead.
Some commentators are interpreting their demise as the end of immigration reform. That’s a premature assessment: immigration reform can still pass, just not through them. And the development was hardly a surprise.
The bipartisan gang’s relevance withered months ago when Speaker John Boehner and House leaders decided to move forward with a plan to advance immigration reform that did not include them. Boehner initially encouraged talks but eventually settled on a plan to pass a series of small individual bills instead of one comprehensive bill of the type the Senate passed in June.
Democrats in the group say the collapse of talks has little to do with quibbling over border security and a lot more to do with Boehner’s decision to bypass them.









