Archive for the ‘Democrats’ Category

Six House Democrats ask Garland to review case of lawyer placed under house arrest over Chevron suit | TheHill – The Hill

Six House Democrats on Wednesday called for Attorney General Merrick GarlandMerrick GarlandSix House Democrats ask Garland to review case of lawyer placed under house arrest over Chevron suit DOJ rescinds Trump-era 'sanctuary cities' policy The Hill's Morning Report - Census winners and losers; House GOP huddles MORE to review the case of a lawyer who claims his yearlong house arrest is retaliation for his work against Chevron.

In a letter Wednesday, Reps. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.), Alexandria Ocasio-CortezAlexandria Ocasio-CortezNYPD cancels use of robotic dog after backlash Trump supporter found guilty of threatening to kill lawmakers Six House Democrats ask Garland to review case of lawyer placed under house arrest over Chevron suit MORE (D-N.Y.), Cori Bush (D-Mo.), Rashida TlaibRashida Harbi TlaibSix House Democrats ask Garland to review case of lawyer placed under house arrest over Chevron suit OSHA sends draft emergency temporary standard for COVID-19 to OMB review Imperative that Democrats figure out what went wrong in 2020 MORE (D-Mich.), Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.) and Jamie RaskinJamin (Jamie) Ben RaskinSix House Democrats ask Garland to review case of lawyer placed under house arrest over Chevron suit Democrats seek to keep spotlight on Capitol siege Congress and the administration cannot play games with the Congressional Review Act MORE (D-Md.) called on Garland to review the case against Steven Donziger.

Donziger sued the energy company on behalf of Ecuadorian farmers and indigenous people and won $9.5 billion in an Ecuadorian court.

Chevron then took legal action against Donziger in the U.S. under the Racketeer-Influenced and Corrupt Organizations statute. District Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled in the companys favor, and Donziger has been under house arrest since August 2019 over criminal contempt charges incurred during his appeal.

Kaplan took the unusual step of appointing private counsel to prosecute the case against Donziger after prosecutors with the Southern District of New York refused.

Seward & Kissel, the firm Kaplan named in the case, has at least two clients who have received significant funding from an investment fund whose vice chairman sits on Chevrons board, according to a filing from Donzigers lawyers.

We have deep concerns that the unprecedented nature of Mr. Donzigers pending legal case is tied to his previous work against Chevron. It is vital that attorneys working on behalf of victims of human rights violations and negative environmental impacts of corporations not become criminalized for their work. If these restrictions are permitted, advocates across this country will feel as though tactics of intimidation can succeed in stifling robust representation, the letter states.

The results of this case will have a lasting impact in the legal practice, suggesting that representation and advocacy can then impede ones ability to exercise fundamental protections, it adds.

A spokesperson for Chevron declined to comment.

The Hill has reached out to the Justice Department for comment.

Updated at 8:23 p.m.

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Democrats Are Releasing a Massive Green Jobs and Justice Plan. Heres Whats In It – Rolling Stone

Progressive Democrats in Congress will on Thursday introduce the Transform, Heal and Renew by Investing in a Vibrant Economy (THRIVE) Act. The bill, which has been promoted for months, outlines a bold and holistic plan to address racial injustice, the climate crisis, and the economic anxiety and mass unemployment exacerbated by the pandemic. I think that for us the pandemic has sadly just showcased our belief that we need to figure out how to help people thrive and not just survive, says Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), one of the bills sponsors.

Bold may be an understatement. While President Bidens proposed infrastructure plan calls for spending $2 trillion over the next 10 years, the THRIVE Act green-lights the investment of $1 trillion annually. The money would go toward creating an estimated 15 million family-sustaining union jobs, rebuilding the nations physical and social infrastructure, and cutting carbon emissions in half by 2030. The bill gives particular attention to lifting up communities of color that have borne the brunt of racial and environmental injustice. Its putting forth this unified vision for a recovery that is deeply intersectional, that is extremely bold, and that meets the scale of these multiple crises that we face, adds Jayapal.

The THRIVE Act is being led by Ed Markey (D-Mass.) in the Senate and Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) in the House of Representatives. The THRIVE Agenda will guide us as we mobilize on a transformative mission to bring justice and healing to our communities, Rep. Dingell said earlier this year. With a broad coalition of colleagues, advocates, and activists, we will save our environment and achieve the racial and economic equity that our nation demands.

The massive scale of the THRIVE Act means that it exists for now as more of a marker than something with a chance of passing through a Congress that cant even stomach far more moderate reform measures. But the same could be said of Green New Deal legislation, the principles of which are now largely supported by the American people. Lawmakers introducing the THRIVE Act are seeking to capitalize on this momentum, as well as the unique opportunity offered by a devastating year that has emphasized the imperative for equitable change.

I always used to say that if politics is the art of the possible, then its our job as activists to figure out how to move the boundaries of what people see as possible, Jayapal says. Thats what I feel like has happened with how the pandemic has combined with the racial justice movement, the economic justice movement, the climate justice movement, and the labor justice movement. All of those things have kind of come together and really created a different vision.

The allocation of the $1 trillion annual investment called for in the THRIVE Act would be guided by a 20-member board composed with representation from impacted communities, indigenous communities, and labor organizations.

The infrastructure upgrades will be geared around cutting emissions in half by 2030, and involve upgrading and expanding water systems, the electrical grid, wind power, solar power, electric vehicle infrastructure, and public transit. The bill holds that by the end of 2030 the majority of Americans will live within walking distance of clean, affordable, high-frequency public transit.

But the THRIVE Act isnt just a green infrastructure initiative that just tacks on a few racial justice measures. Instead, the bill is very much built around lifting up marginalized communities and righting the wrongs of years of environmental racism. There will be equitable hiring. There will be educational initiatives. There will be equity assessments and guardrails put up to prevent discrimination. Communities of color will be given the tools to sustain themselves on their own terms. The THRIVE Act holds that at least half of the $10 trillion in federal investment over the next 10 years will directly benefit those who have been most affected by systemic racism.

Indigenous communities have been given particular attention. The THRIVE Act was originally introduced as a resolution last September by then-Rep. Deb Haaland, who has since been confirmed as the first Native American secretary of the Interior. The bill is filled with language that centers indigenous people, ensuring they have autonomy over their lands. It also ensures free, prior, and informed consent, which means theyd need to sign off before something like, say, a massive pipeline is built through their lands.

Theres been a total abandonment of this nations duty to engage with each nation on an issue about these projects, Ashley Nicole Engle, the Green New Deal organizer for the Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN), says of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Tribes are not organizations. Were not special interest groups. Were individual sovereign nations within this larger nation.

The IEN is one of 15 environmental, labor, and justice groups that make up the Green New Deal Network, the progressive coalition that last year put together what it dubbed the THRIVE Agenda. Since Haaland introduced the THRIVE resolution last fall, it amassed over 100 sponsors before the THRIVE Act was announced in March.

The bills introduction on Thursday comes a day after Bidens first address to Congress, but Jayapal doesnt see the THRIVE Act as at odds with the administrations plans, placing them both on the continuum of progress and casting the bill as a blueprint for what is possible. I feel like the progressive movement and the president himself and the people around the president have really moved miles in terms of how they see these crises and what hes put forward between the jobs and the families plan is incredibly progressive and quite far along on the spectrum, she says. However, obviously, we feel like we need even more than we need it faster.

Part of what makes the THRIVE Act unique is its attention to organized labor, and the creation of not just jobs, but family-sustaining jobs. Democrats have long been criticized for glossing over the impact green-economy initiatives like the THRIVE Act will have on those losing their jobs. Remember in 2016 when Hillary told West Virginias that, Were going to put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of business? The comment was taken out of context (Clinton went on to detail her plan for a just transition), but the gaffe fed into the idea that Democrats were treating fossil-fuel workers like disposable pawns, and that reimagining the economy to take on the climate crisis is at odds with sustaining their livelihoods. Its hard enough to believe in promises from a political candidate. Its even harder when it could mean losing your job.

The deindustrialization of the country has created a lot of cynicism about both the role corporations and government played in really creating a transition for those manufacturing workers, says Mary Kay Henry, president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which is also part of the Green New Deal Network. Thats why we are so fierce in saying they cant just be any old job. They have to be living wage jobs where workers have the opportunity to form a union.

But there have been some recent signs that the fossil-fuel workers could be coming around to the idea of transitioning to a green economy. Last week, United Mine Workers of America President Cecil E. Roberts told The New York Times that he would be open to a transition so long as there are available jobs in renewable energy and the government provides aid to newly out-of-work miners. Were on the side of job creation, of a future for our people, Roberts said. If that isnt part of the conversation at the end of the day, well be hard pressed to be supportive.

Biden has anchored his climate action in the creation of good jobs that people can actually feed their families on as opposed to creating a green energy sector that is poverty wage, Henry explains. I think thats created a huge shift in the labor movement thinking. Yes, were not going to have the same mining jobs in West Virginia, but what jobs can exist as we rebuild physical infrastructure and open up solar and wind.

The THRIVE Act isnt likely to make it through Congress as a single piece of legislation and cure what ails America, but, as Jayapal puts it, its providing a vision for what the nation can see as possible. A decade ago few in the Democratic establishment would have dreamed of even considering the idea of transitioning to an economy predicated on clean energy. Nevertheless, the ideals put forth in Green New Deal legislation have seeped into the policies of the Biden administration, to the policy preferences of average Americans and, increasingly, into what fossil-fuel workers see as sustainable not just for the country, but for their own livelihoods.

I always remind people that sometimes in organizing and progressive movements it feels like youre not making progress, or its too slow and too slow and too slow, Jayapal says. Then suddenly theres a tipping point. Theres something that happens in the outside environment that wakes people up, which I think the pandemic has done. The movement has been building and building and building, and so its ready for that moment when that tipping point occurs, and it can quickly jump into action. I feel like thats where we are and were always going to want more, but weve moved so dramatically. Its really exciting.

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Democrats Are Releasing a Massive Green Jobs and Justice Plan. Heres Whats In It - Rolling Stone

Democrats worry Biden’s hesitation on health care will doom campaign pledges – Politico

Progressive advocacy groups including Public Citizen, the Center for Popular Democracy and Social Security Works came away from a Friday afternoon virtual meeting with staff of the White Houses Domestic Policy Council without a firm commitment that drug price controls and a Medicare expansion would be included in the forthcoming package, which the administration calls the American Families Plan. The groups pitched the policies as ways Biden could fulfill his promise to address racial disparities in health care.

This is a very live issue. No one knows exactly where theyre going to be, said Alex Lawson, executive director of Social Security Works.

Jennifer Flynn Walker, director of mobilization and advocacy for the Center for Popular Democracy, said while the meeting gave her the impression the Biden administration is an "ally" on these policies, holding the president to his campaign promises wont be easy or a slam dunk, given opposition to the drug pricing measures from powerful pharmaceutical interests.

Meanwhile, lawmakers hoping to force the White Houses hand are forging ahead with health care legislation theyre aiming to wrap in the multitrillion-dollar infrastructure package.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Thursday revived her drug price negotiation bill that the House passed last year, and said in a statement that the policy will be a top priority for House Democrats to be included in the American Families Plan.

Progressives like Senate Budget chair Bernie Sanders are moving forward with bills to expand Medicare coverage as Underwood and many other moderates are hoping to further shore up Obamacare.

But without an explicit endorsement from Biden, some congressional Democrats worry their health care plans, big and small, may not survive legislative haggling over the infrastructure package, widely seen as the last major bill they can pass this year.

Bidens backing is important and perhaps decisive, said Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), particularly following the implementation of the president's $1.9 trillion Covid relief package.

This is a very popular president with a lot of wind at his back after the passage of the Rescue Plan, so any policy he gets behind has a lot of instant momentum, Murphy said.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Friday didnt offer further clarity by listing health care as separate from the forthcoming infrastructure pitch as she previewed Biden's address to Congress next week. She demurred when asked directly if the White House is abandoning provisions to lower drug costs and expand health insurance in the plan.

He will definitely talk, in his speech, about his commitment to expanding and increasing access to health care, she said, adding that the American Families Plan will not represent the totality of every priority item for him and every item he wants to move forward as president.

Biden allies outside the administration see the White Houses reticence to wade into the fight in practical terms: The White House doesnt want a big fight with powerful health industry groups to scuttle its chance to deliver on major economic priorities they see as essential to fortifying narrow Democratic majorities in the midterm election.

Health care is complicated politically and substantively, said one outside advisor familiar with the White House deliberations. It seems the White House doesnt want to weigh down issues like preschool or college [aid] with lobbying campaigns from Big Pharma.

The House drug price bill also would face very slim odds in the 50-50 Senate, where even one Democratic defection would likely sink its prospects.

Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey, whose state is home to numerous pharmaceutical companies, has already said he doesnt want to treat the drug industry as a piggy bank to fund other priorities, whether its infrastructure or insurance expansion. Others like moderates Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Jon Tester of Montana are on the industrys watchlist as potential allies likely to block government negotiation.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer stressed again this week that he is waiting for the White House to lead the way on health care an issue that is more fraught for his caucus than for Pelosis, particularly on drug pricing.

And yet most Democrats see the infrastructure bill as their best chance to tend to unfinished business while the party maintains full control of Washington.

Last months Covid relief package, with the full backing of the health industry, directed billions of dollars to temporarily boost subsidized health coverage in Obamacare markets and for people who lost their jobs during the pandemic. House Democratic leaders have made it clear they dont want to waste the chance to make the Obamacare subsidies permanent after a decade of pledging to expand the health care law.

The major expenditure, from my perspective, should be to ensure the Affordable Care Act is truly affordable and accessible to all, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said on Tuesday.

Progressives led by Sanders, the Senate Budget Committee chair, want to go further, pressing a plan that would add dental, vision and hearing benefits to Medicare and lower its eligibility age to 60 or even 50, even though Democratic leaders are unsure whether Biden supports the idea or if theyll have the money to do so.

Rep. Peter Welch, a Vermont Democrat who has long stumped for drug pricing reform and sent his own letter to Biden Friday calling for its inclusion, worries Democrats will lose their way if they get bogged down in a debate over how to spend savings from drug pricing reforms without first locking them down.

We have to keep our eye on the urgency of getting those savings, he told POLITICO. Having a debate about how we spend it before we save it could doom our prospects. The risk is that we wont save it at all and Big Pharma will keep it.

For Democrats, getting these major health care changes into the infrastructure package would be more than just a fulfillment of longtime policy priorities now within their reach. Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said hes repeatedly told the administration that the party risks losing voters in the midterm election if it fails to deliver on health care, which Democrats have featured prominently in their campaigns the past two election cycles.

"I have stressed, continually, with my colleagues and with the White House the urgency of this its a priority," Wyden said, adding hes heard all kinds of rumors about the White House abandoning health care in the infrastructure package. Let me wait and see what theyre going to do."

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Democrats worry Biden's hesitation on health care will doom campaign pledges - Politico

Why Democrats Werent Going To Reverse The Result In Iowa – FiveThirtyEight

That whoosh you just heard? That was House Democrats breathing a sigh of relief now that Democrat Rita Hart has withdrawn her challenge to contest the result in Iowas 2nd Congressional District, which she lost to Republican Mariannette Miller-Meeks by just six votes last November one of the closest federal elections in U.S. history.

Democrats were reportedly worried at the prospect of having to vote on whether to unseat Miller-Meeks, especially considering how loudly they protested former President Trump and Republicans attempts to overturn the 2020 election earlier this year. Additionally, there were concerns it would undermine Democrats efforts to pass a massive voting rights and election reform bill. That, along with the Democrats narrow majority, suggested it was going to be very challenging for Democrats to reverse the outcome even if they felt Hart had a valid case.

Moreover, Republican messaging had put Democrats on the defensive. For instance, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy claimed they were trying to steal the election, while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell pointedly asked major businesses and organizations that were critical of GOP objections to the Electoral College on Jan. 6 to hold Democrats to the same standard for contesting the Iowa result.

The Iowa situation was pretty unusual, as contested elections are fairly uncommon nowadays and reversing election outcomes is even rarer. As the table below shows, contested House elections were once a regular occurrence, especially in the years following the Civil War, when many disputes centered on congressional races in the South, according to data compiled by Jeffery Jenkins at the University of Southern California. But now the number has tailed off considerably, averaging barely one case every five congresses.

Average share of U.S. House seats contested, by decade

*Includes data for six congresses instead of five.

A contested election indicates a result that was formally disputed in the House. Not all contested races resulted in a different winner.

The House reached its current size of 435 seats after the 1910 census, except for the 86th and 87th congresses (1959-1962), when it expanded to include at-large seats from Alaska and Hawaii. The House then returned to 435 seats after the 1960 census and the subsequent reapportionment before the 1962 election.

Source: Jeffery Jenkins

In the past 50 years, the House has voted to reverse an election outcome only once: In 1985, the Democratic-controlled House investigated and recounted the votes in the 1984 election for Indianas 8th Congressional District and determined that Democratic Rep. Frank McCloskey had won by four votes after the Republican candidate had led by 418 votes following a state-run recount. The House then voted 236 to 190 to seat McCloskey, prompting House Republicans to stage a walk-out.

But Democrats had a much larger majority in 1985 than they do today, so they could have afforded 30 or more defections when they voted to seat McCloskey. By comparison, fewer than five Democratic nays could have sunk an attempt to seat Hart because Democrats currently hold only a 219-to-211 seat majority. And some Democrats had privately and even publicly let it be known they didnt want to vote to unseat Miller-Meeks.

In the end, the math wasnt there for Democrats to reverse the outcome, and the potential fallout doesnt seem to have been worth it, either.

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How Democrats Became Stuck On Immigration – FiveThirtyEight

In 2019, when more than two dozen Democrats were vying for the partys presidential nomination, they all seemed to agree on one thing: They opposed former President Donald Trumps draconian immigration policies. Beyond that, though, it got messy. One camp of more progressive Democrats, helmed by former San Antonio mayor and housing secretary Julin Castro, advocated for repealing a law that makes unauthorized border crossings a crime. Other candidates expressed unease with the idea, raising concerns about what that would mean for human traffickers or drug smugglers crossing the border.

But the fact that Democratic presidential candidates were discussing decriminalizing border crossings still represented a significant break. Over the years, Democrats have moved to the left on immigration, and Democratic voters now hold more progressive views on immigration than both their Republican equivalents and one-time Democratic Party leaders like former President Barack Obama. But as the 2019 presidential primary debate shows, theres still a lot of debate in the party on just how far left to go. Democratic strategists and immigration experts Ive talked to say its hard to understand why immigration remains such an issue for Democrats without first factoring in how the partys relationship to immigration has changed and what that has meant for competing factions within the party. Understanding these trends also helps explain why Democrats dont really campaign on immigration, and why this makes President Bidens decision about how to address the current increase of apprehensions at the U.S.-Mexico border an even more complicated situation for a party that doesnt want to risk its congressional majority next year.

Today, its easy to lump the Democrats into two camps: moderate and progressive. But it wasnt always so straightforward. Back in the 1980s and 90s, when the number of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. began to tick up, there were two main schools of thought in the Democratic Party regarding immigration: A civil rights wing aimed at advancing equal opportunity in housing, education and voting rights and, as such, was pro-immigration, and a dueling labor wing that was wary or even hostile toward immigrants whom they worried would replace union workers or undermine working conditions.

But immigration wasnt the polarizing issue it is today, so it wasnt a big talking point among Democrats. (The partys 1984 platform didnt even include a section on immigration.) Republicans, however, were talking about immigration more and started to push for stricter immigration measures, including building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. This, coupled with an effort to crack down on crime, created a dynamic where the GOP was perceived as the party that was tough on crime, while Democrats were depicted as soft on crime.

That changed for Democrats, though, with the election of President Bill Clinton, who ran on a pro-law enforcement platform and criticized his opponent, George H.W. Bush, for cutting local law enforcement aid during his tenure. (Clinton doubled down on this approach, later running on a reelection platform that said, We cannot tolerate illegal immigration and we must stop it.) And it was under Clinton that the law that in essence created the immigration enforcement system as we know it today was passed. The 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act authorized greater resources for border enforcement, added penalties for undocumented immigrants who committed a crime in the U.S., and placed the onus on asylum seekers to provide the documentation needed to support their applications.

In many ways, Democrats decision to get tough on immigration was part of a larger effort to push tougher law enforcement policies. In this same period, Clinton also signed into law the 1996 welfare reform act, which he said would end welfare as we know it and made assistance far more temporary and dependent on employment. There was also the now-infamous 1994 crime bill, which accelerated mass incarceration in the U.S.

Cristobal Ramn, an independent immigration policy consultant, told me that Democrats have gradually moved on from these positions, but stressed how interconnected the laws from then were. The dominant political view, Ramn told me was, that deterrence was the only way to stop violations of the law, including the nations immigration laws. But these laws have left Democrats with an uncomfortable legacy, as they disproportionately affected and criminalized people of color.

In the early 2000s, though, a few things shifted in the Democratic Party. For starters, the share of the partys voters expressing concern about immigrants and refugees entering the U.S. dipped after the number of migrants entering the U.S. declined substantially. Plus, tough on crime policies were expensive and their impact was minimal.

As time went on, the older divides in the party fell away. While there were still some concerns among Democrats about the impact of immigration on the American worker, the pro-union wing of the party became more pro-immigrant after mounting pressure from other unions, in particular service-worker unions, many of whose members are Hispanic. The AFL-CIO also reversed its anti-immigrant positions, calling in 2000 for undocumented immigrants to be granted citizenship. Another major development during the latter part of this decade was an omnibus immigration reform bill Republicans pushed through Congress in 2006, which didnt become law, but would have emphasized border security and raised penalties for illegal immigration.

This is also when Republican and Democratic voters began to dramatically split on immigration, according to polling from the Pew Research Center. In the mid-2000s, the two parties were pretty close in their views. When asked in 2003 if immigrants make the country stronger, 47 percent of Democrats and people who lean Democratic and 46 percent of Republicans and people who lean Republicans agreed. Now, though, nearly 90 percent of Democrats feel that way compared to just 40 percent of Republicans.

But despite this seismic move to the left on immigration, there are still important divisions within the Democratic Party, many of which have roots in the partys past. The two major camps we see elected officials fall into today are the establishment, pro-immigrant wing, which tends to include moderate Democrats, including those who hail from purple districts and/or live along the U.S.-Mexico border and the progressive wing, which includes members who generally see the Democratic Party as too centrist and too cautious.

There is one thing both wings seem to be united on, though: advancing the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which lets undocumented immigrants brought to the country as children apply for renewable work permits and avoid deportation. Theres been some movement on this program as of late: All House Democrats plus nine Republicans voted in favor of the Dream and Promise Act, which would provide a path to citizenship for DACA recipients. (Its less clear how the bill will fare in the Senate.)

But thats about all the two wings have in common. The establishment, pro-immigrant wing of the party tends to approach immigration from a more economic-based lens, according to Veronica Vargas Stidvent, executive director of the University of Texas at Austins Center for Women in Law and former assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Labor. This wing is more likely to be more concerned about the impact of immigrants on the American worker and support limited deportation for certain immigrants (like those in the U.S. without documentation who have committed a crime).

Many elected officials who fall into this group are making tough political calculations. For some (think members like Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a California liberal who has been pro-immigration crackdowns), the fact that they fall in this wing of the party is more a reflection of their moderate politics. But for other members hailing from districts that arent as Democratic, and from states where migrant influxes are more pronounced and Latino voters have shown some signs of moving toward the GOP the fact they fall in this wing is more a reflection of their political reality.

Those who live closest to the U.S.-Mexico border most directly experience the disruptions of unauthorized immigration. As a result, the politics around immigration are complicated. Many Texas Latinos, for example, embrace enforcement-minded views on immigration, even if they also empathize with the migrants. Democrats in this camp are unlikely to support broad overhauls of the immigration system for fear of being alienated from their constituencies. Going too far on immigration reform can also mean theyre depicted as supporting open borders, a phrase that has become a right-wing talking point.

Members of the progressive wing, meanwhile, do want a more humanitarian-based immigration system focused less on border enforcement. Many want to abolish or dramatically restructure U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement a rallying cry that became popular among some Democrats amid some of Trumps most stringent immigration policies and they want the federal government to stop deporting immigrants. They also want to broaden immigrants access to social safety net programs.

Democrats remain at odds over how best to move forward. Bidens approach has so far been to roll back what Trump did, but he is ultimately going to have to pick a side within his party or work toward some sort of compromise. That wont be easy, though, especially when it comes to handling the current issue at the border. For starters, hed likely need Republican support to get anything immigration-related passed (budget reconciliation might not be an option, given parliamentarian rules, unless immigration measures are tacked onto another bill) and the GOP doesnt look likely to cooperate with Democrats.

Plus, whatever action Biden does take risks angering one of the aforementioned wings of his party. If he moves too far left, he risks losing moderate voters, but at the same time, if he doesnt move left enough, he risks breaking his promise of a fair and humane immigration overhaul.

Immigration also presents a broader electoral challenge for Biden. While he gets high marks on his overall job as president, handling of the economy and COVID-19 pandemic, according to a mid-March CBS/YouGov poll, only 52 percent of U.S. adults approve of the way he is handling immigration, among the lowest of the issues YouGov polled.

Anytime you have competing factions, it can do one of two things: push people to the middle to find compromise or result in a stalemate, Stidvent said. And ultimately, as Stidvent cautioned, a Democratic Party that is divided on how best to handle immigration doesnt help either party. That said, it wouldnt be completely surprising if some of the more moderate Democrats did propose some type of compromise with Republicans. (House Democrats passed two bills earlier this year that would offer legal protections for millions of undocumented immigrants, including DACA recipients, and Senate Democrats, hamstrung by the filibuster, might have to find middle ground on Republicans demands for more border enforcement if they want their bills to get to Bidens desk.) But with the current makeup of Congress and the drastically opposing views on immigration reform both within and between the parties, any type of comprehensive immigration reform will be tricky.

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How Democrats Became Stuck On Immigration - FiveThirtyEight