A debate over jobs, the budget, and immigration are on a collision course this week as Republican Senators demand Congress bar undocumented families from claiming tax credits in exchange for GOP votes on an unemployment insurance extension.
Majority Leader Harry Reid is against the proposed amendment from Senator Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, but a senior Democratic aide told msnbc that it might receive a vote along with other GOP amendments as part of a deal to advance the unemployment bill. According to Roll Call, Majority Whip Dick Durbin is working to make sure that Democrats have the votes to defeat Ayotte’s amendment if it comes to the floor.
Immigrants who aren’t authorized to work in the United States are encouraged to still file taxes using a personal identification number instead of a Social Security number. While they can’t take advantage of the Earned Income Tax Credit, they are allowed to claim a refundable child tax credit available to other Americans. A 2011 report by the Treasury Department’s Inspector General found that 2.3 million such filers received $4.2 billion from child tax credits in 2010, with the average family claim totaling about $1,800. The IRS later clarified that immigrants were, in fact, eligible for the credits even if they lacked legal status.
Republicans in Congress have tried repeatedly to change the law to block unauthorized immigrants from using the credit since the IG report’s release. In the latest bid, Ayotte is offering an amendment aimed at, per her office’s description, “stopping a scheme that currently allows illegal immigrants to claim the Additional Child Tax Credit–which currently costs taxpayers billions.” The legislation, which has 14 Republican co-sponsors, would require filers to provide a Social Security number for at least one spouse in order to claim the credits. The money saved, about $20 billion over the next decade, would go towards offsetting the cost of the three-month unemployment extension.
Democratic Senators, along with labor and immigration advocates, warn that the bill would not only affect immigrants without legal status, but a large number of American-born citizens as well. An estimated 4.5 million children with citizenship had at least one undocumented parent in 2010, according to a study by the Pew Hispanic Resarch Center. By comparison, the same Pew report pegged the number of minors in America who lacked immigration status at 1 million.









