HERSHEY, Pennsylvania — At their annual retreat just one year ago, House Republican leaders announced an ambitious proposal to eventually allow millions of undocumented immigrants to stay in the U.S. At this year’s GOP gathering, immigration is once again the leading topic — only this time the debate is over how best to threaten all 11 million undocumented immigrants with blanket deportation and whether it’s worth shutting down the Department of Homeland Security to do so.
The Republican-controlled House passed legislation to that effect earlier this week, which the Senate is unlikely to pass and the White House has threatened to veto. GOP lawmakers huddled here on Thursday to discuss their next steps.
It’s a far cry from the same gathering in January 2014, where GOP leaders were drawing tentative praise from Democrats and advocacy groups for their willingness to work out a productive solution on immigration reform.
“The day after the 2012 election, I said it’s time for Congress and the president to deal with this very important issue,” Speaker John Boehner told the press last year after releasing a list of Republican principles for reform. “I think it’s time to deal with it.”
What’s odd about the new standoff over deportation is that the message from last year’s retreat hasn’t changed. According to House GOP leaders, immigration reform is still always right around the corner.
“I’m very optimistic about it, more optimistic than I have ever been,” House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz told NBC News.
“I think you’ll see a willingness to deal with an immigration system that’s broken and try to fix it,” House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy told msnbc when asked whether legislation granting legal status to any undocumented immigrants was still possible.
The Senate passed a bipartisan immigration reform bill in 2013 only to see the legislation stall in the House. At last year’s party retreat, National Republican Congressional Committee chairman Greg Walden told reporters he expected the House GOP would push forward with a vote on immigration reform once the midterm election primaries were over and members no longer faced a threat from the right. Instead, a tea party challenger took out then-House Majority Leader Eric Cantor on an anti-“amnesty” platform, further scaring members away from the issue.
Boehner announced shortly afterward that the House would not bring up any immigration legislation that year — even bills crafted entirely by Republicans.
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So does Walden think things are over for reform? Not hardly. “This is a new Congress, it’s a new day, its time for a fresh start and we intend to move down that path,” Walden said.
At the start of a press briefing Thursday, Walden paused to note one reporter munching on a five-pound giant Hershey bar, a souvenir from the famous chocolate manufacturing town.
“Is it your goal to eat that by the end of the [retreat]?” Walden asked.
“I’m going to eat it before you guys pass something on immigration,” the reporter replied.
Republicans argue their recent actions are in response to President Obama’s planned executive action that would shield some 5 million undocumented immigrants from deportation. GOPers have decried the president’s “overreach” and say the current debate doesn’t represent the party’s take on the underlying immigration issue. A Republican aide said lawmakers discussed “how we need an immigration system that secures our borders; boosts our economy; and rewards those who have done things the right way” at their retreat as well. Missing from those goals is any pledge to address existing undocumented immigrants.









