Posted on 04/16/2010 4:06:16 PM PDT by mdittmar
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) on Friday promised only to address any comprehensive immigration bill that manages to pass the Senate.
Hoyers caution and refusal to commit to putting an immigration reform bill on the floor if one passes the Senate casts further doubt on Congress' ability to make immigration reform a reality before the end of the year.
The Senate has agreed to move this legislation first, and we think that's appropriate, Hoyer said Friday in an appearance on C-SPANs Newsmakers.
The Senate was unable to move a bill in the last Congress, and we'll see if they can move one in this Congress... But if they do, we will certainly address it."
Pressed on whether addressing a Senate bill would mean bringing it up for a vote in the House, Hoyer responded: If the Senate passes a bill, as I said, the Speaker and I have both indicated we will address that bill.
If they act, we would be prepared to act, he said a few moments later.
Hoyer was interviewed by The Hill, The New York Times and Newsmakers host Greta Brawner. The program will be aired on Sunday.
Knowing an immigration debate could deeply damage their ability to hold on to their majority ahead of the mid-term election, House leaders reached an agreement with their members, the White House and the Senate ensuring that the Senate would have to pass immigration legislation before the House would follow suit.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has indicated a willingness to put a bipartisan, comprehensive immigration reform bill on the Senate calendar as early as this summer -- a move thats designed, in part, to strengthen his own reelection chances.
Hispanic Democrats, primarily in the House, have become increasingly frustrated with what they believe are a string of false promises from their leaders -- including President Barack Obama -- to work to pass an immigration bill this year.
Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.) and, more recently, Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-Calif.), a member of the House leadership, have publicly aired that frustration, and with increasing frequency. The perception that their own leaders in the House are now backtracking on an arrangement made months ago in the face of Reid's seemingly very real desire to move an immigration bill could only inflame those frustrations.
Although House leadership aides recently acknowledged that Democrats are prepared to take on a much lighter and less contentious workload following their passage of healthcare reform, Hoyer said that the House would still have the energy to address immigration before November.
But Hoyer would not say whether he'd prefer to see the Senate act this year, or if he'd rather wait until next year to face the prospect of getting an immigration bill from the Senate.
Senator Reid has indicated that he might be addressing this issue in the Senate as early as sometime this summer, Hoyer said. And thats the judgment of the Senate, and well certainly defer to Senator Reid in making that judgment.
What’s Reid got to lose ,,, he’s toast anyway . Make him a Czar for his sacrifices .
Always thought Bills originated in the House,I’ll have to read more.
The Dems penchant for doing that which goes against the Will of the People to such an extent it deeply damages their re-election prospects is how they earn their description as a regime.
If they don't like being called a regime, then they should stop acting like one.
Money bills, spending or taxation, originate in the House.
They know their time is short!
Thanks mdittmar.
It is my understanding that legislation has to start in the House. Of course the constitution means nothing to these jokers.
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