Congress debates immigration bills
JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press
Sep 20, 2006
WASHINGTON - Congress took up legislation to require voters to show proof of citizenship and to build a 700 mile fence along the Mexican border as Republicans sharpened their attacks on illegal immigration seven weeks before the midterm elections. The House of Representatives debate on a new photo ID plan for voters, and Senate action on the fence, were part of a get-tough policy on illegal immigrants that Republicans have taken in the wake of failure to agree on broader legislation that would set a path for undocumented workers to attain U.S. citizenship.
House Republican leaders have insisted that tighter borders and tougher laws must precede immigration reform. The House passed the fence bill last week and plans to vote on Thursday on bills that will increase penalties for those building tunnels under the border, make it easier to detain and deport immigrant gang members and criminals, and clarify the ability of state and local law enforcement officers to detain illegal immigrants.
Republican sponsors of the voter identification bill insisted that it was a common sense way to stop fraud at the polls. People need photo IDs to board planes, buy alcohol or cash checks, said Rep. Vernon Ehlers (news, bio, voting record), chairman of the House Administration Committee. "This is not a new concept."
But opposition Democrats assailed the legislation, saying it would affect minorities, the poor and the elderly — groups that tend to vote Democratic — who might have trouble producing a photo identification.
"This bill is tantamount to a 21st century poll tax," said Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md. "It will disenfranchise large number of legal voters."
The bill would require individuals to present a photo ID before voting in federal elections by 2008. By 2010 voters must have a photo ID that certifies they are citizens. In response to criticisms that this would be a burden for poor citizens, the bill stipulates that states must provide those identification cards free of charge to those who can't afford them.
The Senate, meanwhile, voted to take up a bill that would build a fence along one-third of the U.S. Mexican border.
Action on the fence, which could cost billions of dollars, comes four months after the Senate approved legislation that, along with tightening border security, created a guest worker program and outlined how people in the country illegally could work toward legal status and eventual citizenship. President Bush has supported this broader approach, but it met strong resistance in the House, where opponents said it was tantamount to amnesty for illegal immigrants.







