House Speaker Paul Ryan said on Tuesday that the United States should take a “pause” in admitting Syrian refugees into the country in wake of the recent terrorist attacks in Paris.
“This is a moment where it is better to be safe than sorry,” the Republican lawmaker told reporters on Tuesday. He said the measure was necessary “in order to verify that terrorists are not trying to infiltrate the refugee population.”
Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy will head a task force to come up with solutions to address the crisis. Ryan said he hopes some type of legislation will land on the House floor sometime this week.
Syria is believed to be one of the home bases of the terrorist group known as ISIS, which has claimed responsibility for Friday’s massacre, which killed more than 120 people and injured 350.
Ryan’s stance could increase the chances that government funding negotiations becomes ensnared in the refugee issue. Several Republicans, in both the House and Senate, have tied the issue to ongoing budget negotiations, raising the potential threat of a government shutdown. In a letter sent yesterday to Senate colleagues, Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL) asked that an upcoming spending bill be changed to require that Obama to get special approval from Congress to fund the refugee program.
Ryan’s comments come a day after a tidal wave of at least 29 governors (all Republicans except one) said that they either oppose accepting Syrian refugees or will not allow any more—either temporarily or permanently—into their states, even as the Obama administration says it will continue to accept 10,000 Syrian refugees in the next year.









