Here’s what’s in the two House immigration bills that will be voted on today

The House will vote on two immigration bills today: the more conservative Goodlatte bill and the Leadership bill which is a compromise between House leadership, moderates, and Freedom Caucus members.

According to Axios, Trump supports them both and they’ve laid out the differences of the two bills. Note that only one bill deals with the family separation issue at the border:

What they have in common: Both bills cover the “four pillars” of GOP immigration priorities:

  • Providing legal status for DACA recipients.
  • Increasing border security, including building a border wall.
  • Ending the diversity visa lottery, which gives 55,000 visas annually to applicants from countries with low numbers of immigrants in the U.S.
  • Limiting so-called “chain” migration, the process by which immigrants who already live in the U.S. can bring their family members here.

DACA

  • Goodlatte: Allows the 690,000 existing DACA recipients to renew legal status every three years. There is no legal pathway to citizenship.
  • Leadership: The Migration Policy Institute estimates that 1.25 million DACA-eligible immigrants would be given legal status, reapplying every six years. They would be qualify for certain merit-based green cards.

The wall

  • Goodlatte: $30 billion for the wall and other border security measures.
  • Leadership: $25 billion for the wall and other border security measures, according to the latest summary.

Family migration

  • Goodlatte: Ends all family-based visas except for the spouses and minor children of green card holders.
  • Leadership: Only eliminates the 23,400 visas for married children of permanent residents and 65,000 visas for adult siblings of permanent residents. It relocates those green cards to a merit-based program, which includes Dreamers and the children of some employment-based visa recipients.

Diversity visa lottery

  • Goodlatte: Eliminates it, relocates some to employment-based categories.
  • Leadership: Eliminates it, but relocates the 55,000 visas to the merit-based program.

Child migrant separation

  • Goodlatte: Does not address.
  • Leadership: Permits the Department of Homeland Security to keep children in detention indefinitely with their parents, but does not specifically address the “zero-tolerance” policy, which results in parents being held in criminal custody by the Justice Department.

Axios says that neither bill is expected to pass. Even if one did pass the House, the Senate would most certainly not have the votes to pass it.

UPDATE: I just wanted to add this because McCaul, who helped author the Goodlatte bill, suggests that their bill does address family separations, at least to some degree:


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