U.S. House votes down border bill favored by conservatives

BY: ARIANA FIGUEROA – APRIL 20, 2024 1:20 PM

 U.S. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson speaks during a news conference after a weekly House Republican Conference meeting in the U.S. Capitol Building on November 14, 2023, in Washington. Johnson brought a Republican border security bill to a floor vote Saturday in an effort to appease conservative members of his conference, but the bill was defeated. (Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images)

WASHINGTON – The U.S. House Saturday failed to pass a border security bill that Republican leadership intended as an incentive for conservatives to support a foreign aid package for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan.

The border bill, turned down on a 215-199 vote with five Democrats joining all Republicans in voting in favor, was brought to the floor under a fast-track procedure known as suspension of the rules that requires a two-thirds majority for passage. The conservatives it was meant to appeal to slammed it as a “show vote.”

The border security bill – nearly identical to legislation House Republicans passed last year – was an attempt by House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana to quell growing hard-right dissatisfaction prompted by his support for the $95 billion foreign aid package expected to pass Saturday with the help of Democrats.

The measure is separate and not part of a package of three supplemental funding bills containing aid for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan as well as another so-called sidecar bill dealing with TikTok. The Senate will be able to clear the foreign aid package and ignore the border security bill that closely resembles another House-passed border bill the Senate has not acted on.

Rather than quell their unrest, Johnson’s move produced only more ire from hard-right members. Three Republicans – Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Thomas Massie of Kentucky, and Paul Gosar of Arizona – are already backing a move to oust Johnson through a motion to vacate.

During Friday’s floor debate, Democrats argued that the bill, H.R. 3602, was a rehash of H.R. 2, a bill House Republicans passed last year that would reinstate Trump-era immigration policies such as the construction of the border wall. Both bills would also require asylum seekers to remain in Mexico.

Border bill return

Republicans were largely in favor of the border bill, but several referred to the vote as a “sham” and admitted the bill would not pass in the Senate, which Democrats control.

“House Republicans are trying again to make our Democrat colleagues and President Biden take this border crisis seriously,” Alabama’s Barry Moore said.

The top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, Jerry Nadler of New York, said the bill was a “foolhardy attempt to pass for a second time one of the most draconian immigration bills this Congress has ever seen. This rehashing of H.R. 2 is a joke.”

“Republicans have proven that they want the issue more than they want solutions,” he said. “So here we are, again, taking a virtually same draconian bill as before, knowing that if it actually passes the House it will surely go nowhere in the Senate.”

Nadler argued if Republicans were serious about addressing immigration at the southern border, they would have supported the bipartisan border bill in the Senate, instead of rejecting it.

Three senators – Oklahoma Republican James Lankford, Connecticut Democrat Chris Murphy, and Arizona independent Kyrsten Sinema – spent months crafting a bill that would overhaul immigration policy at the request of Senate Republicans who insisted border security provisions should be included in the foreign aid package.

But congressional Republicans walked away from it early this year at the urging of GOP presumptive presidential nominee Donald Trump, who was not supportive of the bill because he is centering his reelection campaign on immigration.

The chair of the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, argued that the bill “isn’t quite H.R. 2.”

The bill is nearly identical to H.R. 2, but removes the mandate for employers to verify a worker’s immigration status and employment eligibility, and includes about $9 billion in grant programs for border states.

“Let’s take a step in the direction of fixing it and pass this legislation,” Jordan said of the southern border.

A ‘sham’

Washington state Democrat and chair of the Progressive Congressional Caucus Pramila Jayapal said the bill was pointless.

“The majority could barely pass this legislation last year,” she said, referring to the party-line vote in 2023. “And now it’s going to magically pass it in the House with a two-thirds majority? Give me a break. This bill is going nowhere, so let’s just be clear about that.”

Texas Republican Chip Roy agreed that the bill would not become law, and expressed his frustration that the GOP would not try to leverage foreign aid money for it.

“Republicans continue to campaign on securing the border and then refuse to use any leverage to actually secure the border,” Roy said. “We should get it signed into law but the only way to force Democrats to do it is to use leverage.”

Arizona Republican Rep. Andy Biggs also agreed with Roy and Democrats that “this is a show vote.”

Pennsylvania’s GOP Rep. Scott Perry echoed similar remarks, but said he would still vote for the bill even though it’s “designed to fail.”

“But I want everybody to know it’s a sham,” Perry said.

(c)NEW HAMSHIRE BULLETIN 2024

17 comments

  1. I thought it was sunk by Republicans, but it appears this time the Democrats+5 blocked it, chances are good it wouldn’t have passed the Senate either.

    • Uh, I’m not sureI really understand what happened there, Sir Bill (was the pro vote 215 or 199?), but the text says that five Dems joined the Republicans. And still not enough votes to pass – there must have been 17 Reps who didn’t show up. An absulte majority requires 216 yes-votes. 🤔

      • “I’m not sure I really understand what happened”

        It’s the “new math”. 🙂 🙂 🙂

        (Actually, they needed a two-thirds majority, not an “absolute majority”.)

        • A two thirds majority, Larry? For a simple bill? I was
          unsure if that takes a relative majority of those present or an absolute one of all seated Representatives, but why two thirds? Could you please explain? 🤔

  2. “turned down on a 215-199 vote with five Democrats joining all Republicans in voting in favor”
    “All Republicans’? They have 218 Representatives, thus a majority. Did eight of them abstain or couldn’t be moved to work on a weekend? 😃

    • “The border bill, turned down on a 215-199 vote with five Democrats joining all Republicans in voting in favor, was brought to the floor under a fast-track procedure known as suspension of the rules that **requires a two-thirds majority** for passage.”

      • Ah, that’s the explanation. Excuse me please for being a bit slow on the uptake today. Thank you for making the problem clear, Larry! 👋🙂👍

    • Impossible to predict right now. The number of Republicans who didn’t show up for the vote creates uncertainty. Centrist opposition to Johnson and Trump? Who knows, the Dems may be able to convince some moderate Republicans to go independent and support a bipartisan upset. That would favor Biden, not Trump. 🤔

      • If Biden won’t move his ass concerning border security and stricter handling of fake refugees he will lose landslide in November. Now Trump will sell the nay votes as a betrayal by the Dems after half of the GOP backed the aid bills, and will block future aid for Ukraine. Very frustrating. 😤

        • I agree that this is a hot topic that Biden had ignored for too long. And now it may be too late. What Trump plans to do now or in the future are only wild guesses, though. It’s interesting that he hasn’t shown a reaction yet. 🤔

  3. Hahahhahaahahaha,
    the Republicans could have had it all if they kept it as one bill.

    ^bert

      • Yeah, indeed, Larry. But apparently, they didn’t want it all but preferred to leave the migration wave problem at Biden’s doorstep until the election. Their own voters wouldn’t notice they’ve been fooled anyway. So, this new vote on the border policy bill may have been pure window dressing. You can’t trust Republicans, most of them put their party’s interests before those of the country. That’s why the more honest among them, like the late John McCain, stick out so clearly. Mavericks!
        😈

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