With Congress on recess for the holiday season and only 8 days left on the Congressional calendar when they return, the House and Senate don’t have much time to get anything done– certainly not a resurfaced hot button issue like immigration.
A new report released by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 63% of Americans support citizenship for the roughly 11.7 million individuals living in the United States illegally. 73% of Democrats, 60% of Republicans, and 57% of Independents support a legislative pathway to citizenship, provided certain requirements are met.
How a legislative fix to the country’s immigration system is passed, however, is currently at issue.
When speaking at the Wall Street Journal’s CEO Council this month, President Obama said he would be open to accepting a piecemeal approach to reforming the country’s immigration laws. “If they want to chop that thing up into five pieces, as long as all five pieces get done, I don’t care what it looks like” the President ceded.
The U.S. Senate has already passed a bipartisan immigration reform package after heavy negotiations earlier this year. And advocates for reform are waiting for the House GOP to take up the Senate bill or offer their own legislation. Neither have come to fruition.
At present, the greatest obstacle preventing a solution from passing is an increasingly dysfunctional Republican party with contradictory views.
Speaker John Boehner is at the forefront of the undecided. When cornered by two immigration activists in a diner earlier this month, he said the timing isn’t right and that a smaller-scale, piecemeal approach is best. Yet, when asked by reporters a few days ago about the status of the immigration bill he said, “We have no intention of ever going to conference on the Senate bill.”
Speaker Boehner is not the only prominent Republican with ever-fluctuating stances on the issue.









