Farm Bill’s Fate in House Bodes Ill for Overhaul of Immigration
By JENNIFER STEINHAUER
The Senate and House are set on disparate trajectories that may well
linger beyond this Congress, and may be a dark harbinger for immigration
legislation
Christopher Gregory/The New York Times
By JENNIFER STEINHAUER
Published: June 21, 2013
WASHINGTON — The story of the 113th Congress was on display during a single afternoon this week.
Related
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House Rejects Farm Bill as Food Stamp Cuts Prove Divisive (June 21, 2013)
On the Senate floor Thursday afternoon, Republicans and Democrats forged
a hard-fought path forward on a bill to overhaul the nation’s
immigration system. At the same time, the House was voting down the farm
bill, historically one of the easiest legislative lifts for Congress.
Though both chambers have added more conservative Republican members
over the last few election cycles and partisan divides have deepened,
the House and Senate are set on disparate legislative trajectories that
may well linger for the rest of this Congress and beyond, and may be a
dark harbinger for immigration legislation.
“If you think this is hard,” said Trey Gowdy, Republican of South
Carolina and one of the scores from his party who joined Democrats, for
opposite reasons, to bring down the farm bill, “Try getting 218 on a
path to legal status.”
Senate Republicans and Democrats have come to a compromise on various
issues this year, even along the margins, passing drama-free measures
like a farm bill, and the Violence Against Women Act. They appear to be
working in earnest to come together on immigration, with each side
seeking significant policy and political goals.
“This is not about saving the Republican Party or anything else,” said
Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, a key member of a Senate
coalition on the immigration bill. “This is about something that is
hurting the U.S.A.”
Across the rotunda, House Republicans have clutched even harder the
conservative positions that are popular in largely gerrymandered
Congressional districts, if not among the majority of Americans. As
such, bipartisanship has been largely limited to things like post office
namings and the Permanent Electronic Duck Stamp Act.
The theory in the Senate is simple: If a bill can pass in that chamber
with 70 or more votes, Democrats reason, then the House will be forced
to take it up and pass their version of bills.
But that notion ignores the repeated evidence that many House
Republicans are far more interested in using their floor as a place to
send messages and uphold political principles. Their theory is that
blocking things is less about doing nothing than about preventing
something they dislike.
The farm bill is just the latest and most straightforward example of the
House dynamic. The House measure called for far more significant cuts
to food stamps than the Senate bill did and would have likely passed
with even some Democrats and created a path toward a Senate compromise
in a conference committee.
For many House Republicans, those cuts still did not go far enough.
What’s more, they piled on, adding amendments to allow states to
drug-test food stamp applicants, and to require food stamp recipients to
meet federal welfare work requirements. The result was more Democrats
bailing from the bill, and too many Republicans still unmollified.
This pattern has repeated along a broad array of fiscal and social
policy measures for nearly three years. For measures to extend student
loan rates or payroll tax cuts, aid states hit by natural disasters,
finance the United Nations and keep the government running, House
Republican prescriptive social policy amendments have been their
undoing, alienating Democrats, yet often not going far enough for their
most-conservative blocs.
When it comes to immigration, that battle is almost certain to play out
over the concept of whether or not immigrants here illegally can be
given a road to citizenship.
All this leaves Speaker John A. Boehner with essentially two choices:
pass bills with House Democrats, which is the political equivalent of
cheering with Phillies fans at a Nationals game, or let his conference
pass bills that are so far to the right of anything that the Senate
passes that compromise via conference committee becomes elusive.
The consequences for Mr. Boehner are far from clear; following every
humiliating defeat on the House floor, predictions of the speaker’s
imminent loss of the gavel have become as predictable in Washington as
mosquitoes in June. So far, the House is hard pressed to find a credible
candidate willing to replace him as chaos manager.
But the consequences for the party seem more predictable: while
Democrats have been eager in the past to find a way to compromise with
House Republicans on such things as keeping the government from shutting
down, their tears over failed immigration reform may be more of the
crocodile variety.
Blaming Republicans for a failed immigration overhaul would be, however
disappointing to those most invested in the policies, a political boon
headed into the midterm election, the result of which seems likely to
maintain the current dynamic on the Hill.
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