Top Democratic leaders are slowly ginning up hope that, contrary to the prevailing narrative that Republicans want to banish all immigrants, hope is not entirely lost that Congress could reconcile differences and pass comprehensive reform.
The latest hint comes from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who is suggesting that Congress may take on immigration reform as early as the beginning of the next administration.
He made the case while on a podcast with the Center for Migration Studies last week, which fell under the radar before being picked up by Politico on Wednesday. In the interview, Schumer sounded optimistic that newly-minted House Speaker Paul Ryan would be willing to hash out an immigration deal.
“I think that in 2017, Democrats and Republicans will come together and pass immigration reform,” Schumer said. “Paul Ryan has made no secret about the fact that he has been open to immigration reform.”
RELATED: What a divided Supreme Court would mean for the future of immigration
Schumer’s comments mark the first concrete sign that congressional leaders are willing to bring immigration reform back on the table once President Obama leaves office. The last major attempt ended in failure nearly three years ago, at a time when the political climate around the issue was, comparatively, far less hostile.
But the urgent need for some type of legislative fix for the United States’ mangled immigration system has festered in the time since then. In fact, the stakes appear even higher this week with a blockbuster case before the Supreme Court challenging Obama’s executive actions on immigration. The programs were designed to defer the deportations of nearly 5 million undocumented immigrants. But with those actions possibly imperiled by the high court, the onus now falls on the next president and Congress to take on the problem.
Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton this week doubled down on her pledge that if elected, she would have an immigration reform bill introduced into Congress within her first 100 days in office.
Her platform to grant a pathway to citizenship to millions of undocumented immigrants stands in direct contrast to the proposals of the Republican presidential candidates, who have taken an aggressive hard-line stance against the more than 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living in the United States.
Advocates of pro-immigrant reform have long predicted and hoped that Republican opponents would either have a change of heart on deportation policies, or be voted out of office.









