'Immigration revolution' suggested as solution to Japan's dwindling working population

With a declining population, Japan is on track to lose about half its workforce by 2060, and with that, its status as an economic superpower.

Some are calling for an “immigration revolution” but that is gaining little traction in a country that is seen as the most homogenous in the world.

In Japan, birth rates are at record lows and the ageing population at record highs.

Now, the former head of Tokyo’s Immigration Bureau, Hidenori Sakanaka, is calling for what many Japanese find unthinkable, large-scale immigration.

“We need an immigration revolution to bring in 10 million people in the next 50 years, otherwise the Japanese economy will collapse,” Mr Sakanaka said.

He said it was now a case of “populate or perish” and Japan had to change its mentality.

“Japan is an island country and we didn’t let foreigners enter for over 1,000 years, so we haven’t had great experiences living with other ethnic groups,” he said.

Japan’s last experience with immigrants did not end well.

To fuel Japan’s “economic miracle”, Brazilians of Japanese descent were encouraged to return in the 1980s and 1990s.

With their very different culture, they established communities and worked in factories, but when the bubble burst and companies downsized, many of the 300,000 Brazilians were sent home.

Shoko Takano stayed and set up a school to support the Brazilian community.

Most of the children are third or fourth generation but still cannot get Japanese citizenship.

“Japanese Brazilians are disadvantaged and they get bullied,” Ms Takano said.

“The kids can’t speak Japanese well so they’re bullied. They become dropouts and the job prospects are not good. The community is behind from the very start.”

Foreign worker visas pose problems

The Japanese government has said the solution to the shrinking workforce is to give more foreigners, working and training visas for three to five years.

But the United Nations has likened the scheme to slavery where the workers have no rights and are paid little.

A Bangladeshi man, who wants to remain unidentified, worked in the Japanese construction industry for decades but was forced out. He said he was discriminated against.

“The Japanese workers told me they didn’t want to work with me or learn from me even though I have a lot of experience. I couldn’t go on,” he said.

His lawyer, Shoichi Ibusuki, said more visas for foreign workers was not the answer. About 200 Japanese companies had already been found guilty of mistreatment.

“The government has to create a proper system to accept foreigners and understand them more. They’re using a distorted system and foreign workers’ human rights are being violated,” Mr Ibusuki said.

Mr Sakanaka agreed, saying Japan needed a permanent solution to the problem, not a quick fix.

“This is ridiculous. After considerable effort they learn skills and the language in Japan and then they have to go home after five years,” he said.

“I think it won’t last and it should be abolished. The government has to have real immigration.”

For continued prosperity, Japan faces a choice: embrace immigration with full rights or lose its position as the world’s third biggest economy.

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'Immigration revolution' suggested as solution to Japan's dwindling working population

With a declining population, Japan is on track to lose about half its workforce by 2060, and with that, its status as an economic superpower.

Some are calling for an “immigration revolution” but that is gaining little traction in a country that is seen as the most homogenous in the world.

In Japan, birth rates are at record lows and the ageing population at record highs.

Now, the former head of Tokyo’s Immigration Bureau, Hidenori Sakanaka, is calling for what many Japanese find unthinkable, large-scale immigration.

“We need an immigration revolution to bring in 10 million people in the next 50 years, otherwise the Japanese economy will collapse,” Mr Sakanaka said.

He said it was now a case of “populate or perish” and Japan had to change its mentality.

“Japan is an island country and we didn’t let foreigners enter for over 1,000 years, so we haven’t had great experiences living with other ethnic groups,” he said.

Japan’s last experience with immigrants did not end well.

To fuel Japan’s “economic miracle”, Brazilians of Japanese descent were encouraged to return in the 1980s and 1990s.

With their very different culture, they established communities and worked in factories, but when the bubble burst and companies downsized, many of the 300,000 Brazilians were sent home.

Shoko Takano stayed and set up a school to support the Brazilian community.

Most of the children are third or fourth generation but still cannot get Japanese citizenship.

“Japanese Brazilians are disadvantaged and they get bullied,” Ms Takano said.

“The kids can’t speak Japanese well so they’re bullied.

They become dropouts and the job prospects are not good.

The community is behind from the very start.”

Foreign worker visas pose problems

The Japanese government has said the solution to the shrinking workforce is to give more foreigners, working and training visas for three to five years.

But the United Nations has likened the scheme to slavery where the workers have no rights and are paid little.

A Bangladeshi man, who wants to remain unidentified, worked in the Japanese construction industry for decades but was forced out.

He said he was discriminated against.

“The Japanese workers told me they didn’t want to work with me or learn from me even though I have a lot of experience.

I couldn’t go on,” he said.

His lawyer, Shoichi Ibusuki, said more visas for foreign workers was not the answer.

About 200 Japanese companies had already been found guilty of mistreatment.

“The government has to create a proper system to accept foreigners and understand them more.

They’re using a distorted system and foreign workers’ human rights are being violated,” Mr Ibusuki said.

Mr Sakanaka agreed, saying Japan needed a permanent solution to the problem, not a quick fix.

“This is ridiculous.

After considerable effort they learn skills and the language in Japan and then they have to go home after five years,” he said.

“I think it won’t last and it should be abolished.

The government has to have real immigration.”

For continued prosperity, Japan faces a choice: embrace immigration with full rights or lose its position as the world’s third biggest economy.

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Improvements for immigration medicals

Immigration New Zealand (INZ) has selected clinics from all over the country to be part of an onshore panel physician network that will complete immigration medical examinations for onshore New Zealand visa applicants.

A total of 72 medical clinics, 54 radiology clinics and eight clinics that offer both services have been invited to join the onshore panel physician network and use a new system known as eMedical, which allows physicians to submit medical certificates and x-rays online. The selection of the panel physician network follows a procurement process, which began late last year.

eMedical , which was developed by Australia’s Department of Immigration and Border Protection and Citizenship and Immigration Canada, has already been rolled out to more than 470 clinics in 121 countries.

INZ currently receives around 120,000 medical certificates a year. About half of those are onshore.

INZ General Manager Stephen Dunstan says that eMedical is expected to replace 100 per cent of paper-based medical certificates onshore.

“eMedical is a significant change to the way we process health information for our applicants,” Mr Dunstan says. “eMedical supports INZ’s move to online applications and provides a more secure and efficient process for submitting immigration medicals.”

Once the onshore panel physician network is established on 31 March visa applicants in New Zealand will need to visit a doctor or radiologist listed by INZ for their immigration medical examinations.

Clinics that are not on the panel will still be able to submit paper-based medicals until 30 June, giving them a three-month transition period to adjust their business models.

“We have ensured that clinics have been selected in the main centres as well as in regions where there are large migrant populations,” Mr Dunstan says. “But clinics not selected will have an opportunity to be appointed to the panel should further capacity be required.”

Mr Dunstan says that INZ will be constantly reviewing the number and location of immigration medicals throughout New Zealand and the world and will make any changes necessary to ensure that customers continue to receive the best service possible.

There is no cost to clinics to be part of the onshore panel and to use eMedical, so there should be no increase to the cost of medical examinations.

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Israel Urges Mass Jewish Immigration After Denmark Attacks

(Bloomberg) — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged Jews in Europe to move to Israel after a synagogue guard in Copenhagen was among two people shot dead in attacks that stunned the Danish capital.

Assaults on Jews in Europe are expected to continue, Netanyahu said at the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on Sunday, according to a statement from his office.

“Jews deserve protection in every country but we say to Jews, to our brothers and sisters: Israel is your home,” he said. “We are preparing and calling for the absorption of mass immigration from Europe,” he said.

More from Bloomberg.com: Here Comes the Lindsey Graham 2016 Polling

Netanyahu asked the cabinet to allocate 180 million shekels ($46 million) for a plan to absorb new immigrants from France and Belgium, where safety concerns rose after Islamist militants attacked Jewish targets, and from war-ravaged Ukraine.

Immigration from France, home to about 500,000 Jews, doubled in 2014 to about 7,000 from the previous year, a 25-year high. A record 8,000 people visited Israel opportunity fairs held across France in the first week of February by the Jewish Agency, the Israeli quasi-governmental agency that promotes immigration.

More from Bloomberg.com: Singapore’s Lee in Surgery Today After Prostate Cancer Diagnosis

Danish police on Sunday killed the unidentified suspect in the attacks, which also claimed the life of a participant in a rally to support free speech. The shooting near the synagogue, following the Jan. 9 killing of four French Jews in a Paris grocery, has heightened concern in Israel over the safety of Europe’s Jewish communities.

Paris Shooting

Netanyahu made similar statements about immigration after the Paris shooting, saying Israel would welcome European Jews who chose to emigrate out of safety concerns. Some European Jewish leaders accused Netanyahu at the time of undermining their communities and ignoring security threats in Israel. The prime minister’s critics said the premier was seeking to drum up domestic support before national elections in March.

More from Bloomberg.com: Temasek Sold Alibaba Shares Last Quarter, Added Gilead

Denmark’s 7,000 Jews have been considered one of the most secure Jewish communities in Europe since the Second World War, in which most were spared the Nazi death camps when the Danish resistance movement aided in their 1943 escape from the German occupation into neutral Sweden.

Netanyahu’s “message today that there can be no Jewish life anywhere but here, is not one that in any way helps a community in Denmark going through an earthquake,” said Danish-born Jerusalem Rabbi Michael Melchior in a phone interview. Jews should move to Israel “out of choice” and not fear, said Melchior, whose son works as a rabbi in the Copenhagen synagogue that was attacked.

After the shooting in Denmark, Moshe Kantor, the leader of the Brussels-based European Jewish Congress, said European governments aren’t doing enough to protect their Jewish communities against militants.

The attack “demonstrates that defensive measures to protect the public, and the Jewish community in particular, are not enough,” Kantor said by e-mail. “The authorities must change the paradigm and take the battle to the radical Islamist enclaves, prevent the next attack and bring the terrorists and their supporters to task.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Calev Ben-David in Jerusalem at cbendavid@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaa Shahine at asalha@bloomberg.net Amy Teibel, Sophie Caronello

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Greece Pledges to Shut Immigrant Detention Centers

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Choices dwindle for Republicans in security, immigration fight

By Susan Cornwell

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Congressional Republicans are running out of options to pass a Homeland Security funding bill that blocks President Barack Obama’s immigration orders, raising the threat of another showdown that could idle parts of a key government agency.

With a Feb. 27 deadline looming, Republican House and Senate leaders have been unable to agree on a strategy to extend the spending authority of the agency charged with securing U.S. borders, airports and coastal waters.

A House-passed version of the spending bill would de-fund Obama’s 2012 and 2014 executive orders lifting the threat of deportation for millions of undocumented immigrants. But Obama has threatened to veto the House bill, and Democrats have blocked Senate consideration of it in three separate votes.

The dispute has opened up Republican divisions and left the party with unpalatable options: partially shut down the agency that leads domestic counterterrorism efforts, pass a short-term extension that postpones the fight or set aside the immigration battle with Obama and approve a “clean” funding bill.

The eventual answer could offer clues to the leadership approach and abilities of House Speaker John Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who have promised the new Republican-controlled Congress will get things done while confronting Obama. Lawmakers left town on Friday on a 10-day holiday break with no movement from their entrenched positions.

Conservatives are demanding that Republicans stand firm in challenging the immigration orders, which they see as another sign of the president’s constitutional overreach.

“I believe Congress unfortunately is in a position where it cannot acquiesce — because it acquiesces in a long-term alteration of the power relationship, and it acquiesces to an unlawful act,” Senator Jeff Sessions, an Alabama Republican, told reporters in a Capitol hallway.

“The president has put us in a position where it’s going to be difficult to maneuver a way out,” Sessions said.

“IN A FIX”

Some Republicans say the impact from a DHS funding lapse would be minimal, as the department would continue its core protective functions. See Factbox.

But a few moderate Republicans, who have seen the party get blamed for past battles over shutting down the government, are beginning to say a “clean” bill is better than a shutdown.

“I’ve been in this position before. We’re going to pass a bill at some point that funds this and some of us are going to be accused of being capitulators, surrenderers, squishes,” said Representative Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania.

Democrats said Republicans have painted themselves into a corner where the only way out is to climb down or cut off funds to Homeland Security.

“They’re in a fix. Let’s see how they get themselves out of it,” House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said of Republicans.

Tea Party conservatives say their constituents disapprove of Obama’s immigration actions, and that Democrats will take the blame if Homeland Security shuts down.

Giving up would produce an “uproar” from voters, Republican Representative Raul Labrador said this week.

Some lawmakers hope for a reprieve from a court case in Texas, where a federal judge has been asked by over two dozen states to block Obama’s 2014 immigration order.

Republican Representative Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina said that if the court rules against Obama, it would be appropriate for lawmakers to consider funding DHS at least while the court injunction is in effect.

In the meantime, compromise has been elusive. Last week Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine proposed a compromise that would only block Obama’s 2014 immigration order and not his 2012 order, but she has found no Democratic takers.

“What I’ve found is that the Democrats at this point think they can just hold fast,” Collins told Reuters. “I hope there will come a point where people realize that we’ve got to find a compromise that prevents a shutdown of this important department.”

(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; additional reporting by David Lawder; editing by John Whitesides and Stuart Grudgings)

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Immigrant loses latest bid to stay

A 40-year-old illegal immigrant has lost the latest round of his fight to stay in the UK – nearly 18 years after being told he had no right to remain.

The man arrived in Britain from India in June 1997 and claimed asylum, judges heard.

His claim was refused and in November 1997 he was served with “formal notification” that he was “liable to be removed”.

But he remained – and met a partner, had children, bought a house, worked in construction and as a lorry driver, and launched a legal battle.

At one stage Home Office immigration officials had taken more than six years to deal with his “application for indefinite leave to remain”, judges were told.

Detail of the man’s case emerged in a ruling by the Court of Appeal.

Three judges dismissed his latest appeal – following a hearing in London – after being told that he had claimed his human right to respect for family life had been breached when he was not allowed to stay.

The man’s history was outlined by appeal judge Lord Justice Underhill – who named him only as “Mr Singh” – in a written ruling.

“Mr Singh is aged 40 and is an Indian national,” said Lord Justice Underhill.

“He came to this country on 15 June 1997, when he was 22, and claimed asylum.

“His claim was refused, and on 1 November 1997 he was served with formal notification that he was liable to be removed.

“He has remained here illegally ever since.”

Lord Justice Underhill said that, in March 2006, the man applied for “indefinite leave to remain” under an immigration rule known as the “10 years’ continuous lawful residence provision” – and under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which enshrines the right to respect to family and private life.

That application was not dealt with by the UK Border Agency until October 2012, said Lord Justice Underhill.

Officials then refused the application – saying the man’s residence had “not been lawful”.

The man, whose partner travelled to the UK on a visitor’s visa and was an “overstayer”, then appealed to an immigration tribunal.

That appeal was dismissed by a judge in January 2013.

The man then appealed to a higher-ranking tribunal – and that appeal was dismissed by another judge.

The man then took his case to the Court of Appeal.

His claims were analysed by appeal judges Lady Justice Arden, Lord Justice Lewison and Lord Justice Underhill at a hearing in November 2014.

They have also now ruled against him.

Lord Justice Underhill described the case, on one basis, as “straightforward” and said the man had no claim under Article 8.

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Swiss government presents bill to rein in EU immigration

Geneva (AFP) – The Swiss government on Wednesday presented a bill for new quotas on immigration from the European Union, a year after voters narrowly approved such curbs and put the country on collision course with Brussels.

The bill, which will now be submitted to political parties, professional organisations, unions and other interested parties for consultation, is the result of a popular vote just over a year ago.

The February 9, 2014 vote saw a hair’s-breadth majority approve measures pushed by the populist right-wing Swiss People’s Party to dramatically rein in immigration from the EU.

This has created a headache for the government, which opposed the move, and which needs to find a way to implement the people’s will without ripping up a range of decade-old treaties governing Switzerland’s ties with the bloc, its top economic partner.

They include a deal giving EU citizens free access to wealthy Switzerland’s labour market.

Swiss Justice Minister Simonetta Sommaruga, who also currently holds the country’s rotating presidency, stressed Wednesday that Switzerland would do everything in its power to “square the circle”.

In the law proposal, the Swiss government, or Federal Council, said the proposed limits on immigration would take effect in February 2017.

The government had agreed on a framework for negotiations with Brussels to find a solution that could maintain the bilateral agreements, she said.

But the wealthy Alpine country may not have anyone to negotiate with: Brussels has repeatedly said it cannot accept any compromise on its core principle that European citizens have the right of free movement.

The two sides are soon set to start “intense consultations” on the issue, Sommaruga said, but it remains unclear if actual negotiations will be possible.

“The positions are very far apart, and there is not much maneuvring room,” she acknowledged.

In line with last year’s popular vote, the draft law calls for the reintroduction of work and residence permit quotas for any EU citizens remaining in the country for longer than four months.

It also demands controls on the tens of thousands of people who each day commute from homes in France, Germany and Italy to work in Switzerland.

The draft law, which after consultations will go on to be debated in parliament and could also be put to another popular vote, aims to rein in ballooning immigration.

Some 80,000 foreigners, most from the EU, settle in the country each year, and around a quarter of the country’s around eight million inhabitants are foreign nationals.

“Switzerland counts four times more immigration than Britain,” said Swiss Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter.

The draft law would require employers to show no Swiss workers qualify for a position before obtaining a work permit for a foreign nationals.

The rules would however be looser for sectors with large labour shortages, the government said.

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Eddie Van Halen Talks Immigrant Roots, Innovation in Music

For Eddie Van Halen, making music is all about having good ears and a talent for experimenting with guitars and amps to create just the right sound.

Now 60, Van Halen told The Associated Press he’s ready to get back on the road. His band recorded a live album — its first with founding singer David Lee Roth — in 2013, and it’s waiting for a release date.

On Thursday, Eddie Van Halen is visiting the Smithsonian for a sold-out event to donate some instruments to the National Museum of American History and to discuss making music and his innovative guitar and amp designs. He even holds patents on some inventions.

Van Halen, it turns out, is a Dutch immigrant born in Amsterdam who came to the U.S. when he was 7. Many people just think he was born a rock star, he says. It wasn’t so easy, though, for him and his brother and bandmate Alex. Their family immigrated to California in 1962, drawn by the “land of opportunity.” Their father was a musician who also worked as a janitor, while their Indonesian-born mother was a maid. The Van Halens shared a house with three other families.

“We showed up here with the equivalent of $50 and a piano,” Van Halen said. “We came halfway around the world without money, without a set job, no place to live and couldn’t even speak the language.

“What saved us was my father being a musician and slowly meeting other musicians and gigging on weekends, everything from weddings to you name it to make money.”

Van Halen went on to help lead one of the most popular rock bands of the 1980s, known for hits including “Jump” and “Why Can’t This Be Love.” He discussed his immigrant roots and his penchant for experimentation.

———

AP: Did you feel like an outsider as a new immigrant?

Van Halen: Oh yeah. Believe it or not, the very first school I went to was still segregated where people of color were on a certain side of the playground and white kids were on the other side. Since I was also considered a second-class citizen at the time, I was lumped with the black people. It was rough, but music was a common thread in our family that saved us.

AP: What sparked your interest in pursuing music more seriously?

Van Halen: It was definitely just being in a house that was full of music. My earliest memories of music were banging pots and pans together, marching to John Philip Sousa marches. And hearing my dad. He had his music going downstairs, practicing.

AP: I understand you never learned to read music. How did you learn to play?

Van Halen: I was just blessed with good ears, to the disappointment of my piano teacher. … I had to see what my fingers were doing. Believe it or not, I’m not very good at playing in pitch dark on guitar either. I need to see where I’m at.

AP: How did you work to keep the Van Halen sound current over the decades?

Van Halen: I think being true to ourselves and not trying to follow trends. We never did. We actually got signed to Warner Brothers in 1977 in the midst of punk and disco. We were the odd man out, so to speak. Of course when we started playing clubs, we had to play Top 40 songs, and for the life of me, I could never make anything sound the way it was supposed to sound. I could never emulate other people’s playing — a blessing in disguise.

AP: What was the most important thing you’ve done to innovate with your equipment?

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Cruz's immigration gambit



Outside a Senate Republican lunch on Tuesday, Ted Cruz lashed GOP leaders for their plan on immigration, telling reporters that it’s a “strategy designed to lose.”

Inside the GOP lunch, Cruz was mum and didn’t raise the issue at all, according to three senators at the gathering.


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As he prepares for a likely presidential run, the Texas Republican senator is proceeding cautiously on the latest controversy engulfing the Senate. He is trying to showcase his role as a leading agitator, pulling a recalcitrant Republican establishment to the right. But with his party now struggling to find a way out of an immigration jam, pushing conservatives to take a hard line could result in a standoff with the White House and a politically damaging shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security — just as Cruz prepares to roll out his presidential campaign.

Unlike the battle over Obamacare that prompted the government shutdown in 2013, Cruz is keeping his distance from this latest fight, blaming GOP elders and Democrats for the mess — while taking an unusually low-profile role despite his own outspoken opposition to the president’s immigration policies last year.

Through Tuesday evening, Cruz had not delivered a single speech on the floor over the past week when the issue has dominated the Senate. (His like-minded conservative colleague, Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, has spoken for 147 minutes about the topic since Feb. 2.) At several lunches where the issue was discussed, Cruz was either silent on the immigration matter or spoke sparingly, senators said. And even at a private Republican retreat last month in Pennsylvania, Cruz skipped a Senate strategy session where the party’s leadership and committee chairmen laid out a game plan for the first several weeks of the new Congress and discussed the immigration fight, attendees said.

It was a sign of how Cruz has to balance his message as a conservative firebrand who says he’s not afraid to “stand and lead” while dealing with the legislative realities in Washington — and the fact that he dines daily with Republican senators when Congress is in session. He’s willing to bash his party publicly but rarely singles out GOP senators by name. And after coming under tremendous heat from his own party during the government shutdown, including being berated behind closed doors, Cruz has avoided private confrontations with GOP senators over the tactics they are pursuing.

“No,” Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) said when asked if Cruz had raised concerns about the immigration matter in private lunch meetings.

“Not when I’ve been there,” said South Dakota Sen. John Thune, No. 3 in Senate GOP leadership, when asked if he’d heard Cruz raise private objections to the latest immigration strategy.

The back and forth over immigration highlights the larger problems facing Republicans as they deal with their first messy legislative fight since taking control of the Senate last month. In the aftermath of President Barack Obama’s post-election move to defer deportations for roughly 5 million undocumented immigrants and pave the way for them to obtain work permits, Republicans have been struggling to find a strategy to push back effectively.

Cruz, one of the most furious critics of what he refers to as Obama’s “executive amnesty,” pushed his party’s leaders to include in a mega-funding bill late last year a provision to block the actions. But GOP leaders, nervous about another government shutdown immediately after they won big in November’s elections, cut a deal with Senate Democrats, who were still in control of the chamber at the time, as well as the White House. They pushed through a compromise omnibus spending package that funded virtually the entire government through the end of September but temporarily extended money for DHS until Feb. 27.

The idea, Republicans said, was to fight the president’s immigration strategy when it was time to consider the budget for DHS, the agency that enforces immigration laws, when the party assumed control of both chambers in 2015. So last month, House Republicans included in the $39.7 billion DHS funding bill a provision to block Obama’s 2014 immigration policies and a 2012 move deferring deportations to undocumented immigrants brought to the country illegally at a young age.

But the GOP quickly ran into a problem: the Senate. Despite controlling 54 seats, Republicans faced a wall of opposition from Democratic senators who are demanding a “clean bill” stripped of any immigration riders. On three separate occasions last week, Democrats filibustered the bill, with Republicans falling seven votes shy of the 60 needed to bring the measure to the floor for a debate. (GOP Sen. Dean Heller of Nevada joined a united Democratic Caucus in blocking the bill.)

On Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) finally acknowledged the obvious: The chamber was “stuck.”

“I think it’s clearly stuck in the Senate, we can’t get on it, we can’t offer amendments to it,” McConnell told reporters. “And the next step is obviously up to the House.”

But House Republicans pointed back at the Senate, saying the chamber needed to pass its own bill.

The blame, Cruz said, lies squarely at the feet of party leaders.

“What I said this weekend was clear, which is this current ‘Crominbus’ bill was designed by leadership,” Cruz said Tuesday, referring to comments he made during two political shows on Sunday. “I objected strenuously at the time and made the point that it was a strategy designed to lose. My objections were overruled.”

Cruz added: “Leadership proceeded nonetheless down this path, and it’s now incumbent on leadership to explain what their path is to what they stated the end goal would be.”

Still, GOP leaders said they designed their strategy to placate immigration hard-liners like Cruz as well as to avoid a government shutdown. While Cruz voted against the December spending bill, Republicans say they could use the Texas senator’s help to pressure Democrats now.

Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), said the leadership plan was developed after extensive consultations with House Republicans.

“And while it may not be perfect,” Steel said, “it is certainly preferable to the alternative.”

Pushing on the issue in the lame-duck session, said Flake, would have been more challenging given that Republicans were still in the minority last year.

“Anything that’s tough now would have been tougher before we had a majority,” he said.

It’s not unusual for Cruz to differ with his caucus over tactics. Since joining the Senate after winning the seat vacated by then-Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas) in the 2012 elections, Cruz in 2013 blocked efforts by the House and Senate to negotiate a budget resolution, arguing it would be a back-door way to raise the debt ceiling. In September 2013, he pushed House Republicans to include in a government funding bill provisions that would have defunded Obamacare, even taking to the floor for a marathon 21-hour speech. A week later, the standoff prompted a government shutdown and ample GOP recriminations over his strategy.

In February 2014, Cruz filibustered a bill to raise the debt ceiling, prompting McConnell and his fellow Texas Sen. John Cornyn, along with other Republicans, to advance the measure because they feared its failure would prompt a government default on its obligations. And in December, Cruz — along with his ally, Utah Sen. Mike Lee — effectively forced the Senate to return to Washington for a rare Saturday session in order to lodge a protest over Obama’s immigration policies. The tactic, GOP senators publicly complained, strengthened the Democrats’ hands. Cruz later apologized to his colleagues for abruptly interrupting their weekend plans, though he showed little remorse for mounting the immigration fight.

Such fights are expected to be central to Cruz’s likely presidential campaign, giving him an argument to advance that he’s battled with his party leadership over the direction of the GOP.

With the House DHS bill stalled in the Senate, Boehner has publicly called on Cruz — and Sessions — to lead the charge in their chamber.

“It’s time for Sen. Cruz and Sen. Sessions and Senate Republicans and Senate Democrats to stand with the American people and to block the president’s actions,” Boehner said last week.

But Cruz told reporters Tuesday that Boehner and McConnell had “given away virtually all our leverage by funding almost the entirety of the federal government” in last December’s funding package. Cruz also called on McConnell to prevent the confirmation of all presidential nominations who are not vital to national security interests — until Obama relents on immigration. (McConnell has ignored his call.)

Asked whether he agreed with Cruz’s criticism of the strategy so far, Sessions was cautious.

“I don’t know about that,” the Alabama conservative said. “We should fund Homeland Security, which this bill does, but we shouldn’t fund the unlawful actions the president took on immigration.”









Source Article from http://www.politico.com/story/2015/02/ted-cruz-immigration-115101.html
Cruz's immigration gambit
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