The Senate’s 82-15 vote on Tuesday to prevent a filibuster on the immigration bill has brought President Obama a step closer to being the first president since Ronald Reagan to make a lasting impression on immigration policy.
Reforming that policy has been one of the president’s legislative priorities since taking office. Now, after passing the Affordable Care Act, enacting an $831 billion economic stimulus package, and successfully bailing out the auto industry, Obama is poised to have immigration reform as his next big victory in his legislative agenda.
However, with hundreds of amendments being introduced on the Senate floor, it remains to be seen if an immigration bill will ever reach the president’s desk.
Amendments introduced from both sides of the aisle could become “poison pills” to the larger reform efforts, the Melissa Harris-Perry panel discussed on Saturday. One such amendment is Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn’s proposal that a 90% apprehension rate of undocumented immigrants be achieved before the bill’s pathway to citizenship becomes enacted.
The New York Times editorial board wrote Friday that such a precise calculation is nearly impossible to make, creating an impossible mandate that would indefinitely prevent a pathway to citizenship from coming into effect.
Democratic consultant Jamal Simmons described Cornyn’s involvement with the bill as evoking Peanuts’ “Lucy with the football”–citing Cornyn’s demands for concessions that weakened the 2007 immigration bill, only to vote against the final measure.
Other amendments seeking to build triggers for a pathway to citizenship into the bill have already failed, including Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley’s proposal for the Department of Homeland Security to first demonstrate six months of “effective” border control. That amendment was defeated in a 57-43 vote on Thursday.
Controversial amendments still on the table include Oklahoma Sen. James Inhofe’s push to allow English-only workplace policies and to declare English as an official language. Another measure out by Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy would extend benefits to same-sex partners of undocumented immigrants.








