Contradicting U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who expressed his “intention” to allow a Senate vote on DACA and other immigration issues, even if other issues, like defense spending and disaster relief, were not resolved, U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner today walked back expectations that a DACA vote will actually occur, stating that Senate agreements on “funding the federal budget for the year,” on “budget caps,” and on “defense spending” must be completed before the Senate will take up the “DACA issue.”
Gardner: “The government reopened,” said Gardner on KHOW 760-AM’s Ross Kaminsky Show today. “And now we have till February 8th to get a number of things done, including agreement on funding of the federal government for the year, the budget caps that need to get done, along with defense spending. And then if that is all accomplished, I think Senator McConnell has said that he will do what he said he’d do Friday night, and that’s turn to a debate on the DACA issue.” [listen below; emphasis added]
Gardner, who was a member of the so-called Gang of Six senators who spearheaded negotiations to fund the federal government until Feb. 8, appears to be lowering expectations that any agreement on the Dreamers will be reached by Feb. 8, given the complications for Senate approval of a full one-year budget deal and other issues.
Kaminsky asked Gardner directly what he thought Democrats would do “if that other stuff takes a long time and we start getting near the end of this C.R. period and there isn’t progress on DACA.”
Gardner: “Well, I think that’s exactly the way Senator McConnell laid it out last night,” Gardner replied. “I think what he said was, ‘Fund the government. Get it going, and then we’ll turn to immigration issues dealing and relating to DREAMers, DACA.’ So, I think that’s what he has said, you know. And it needs to be done because quite frankly, if you don’t do that then you end up in the same situation we are, with another shutdown. And that’s simply unacceptable, too. So I think the promise was made to get that done to — you know, if people agreed to get that done, then just shift to this immigration debate.”
Garnder’s statement contradicts the “intention” of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to bring up DACA even if other issues, including military spending, disaster relief, healthcare, and border security, have not been resolved by the Feb. 8 deadline. (Watch McConnell’s statement yesterday here.)
McConnell: “However, should these issues [including defense spending and disaster relief] not be resolved by the time the funding bill before us expires on Feb. 8, 2018, assuming that the government remains open, it would be my intention to proceed to legislation that would address DACA, border security and related issues,” McConnell said yesterday.
Gardner’s office didn’t return a call for comment.
During a CNN interview yesterday, Gardner again lowered expectations for passage of a DACA bill, saying he believes serious concessions will be necessary to bring more Republicans on board, such as extending the Dreamers’ path to citizenship beyond the 12 years currently proposed and providing more funding for the border wall. And the bill won’t fly with a 48-12 split, he said
Listen to Jan. 23 KHOW interview here beginning at 1 min 20 seconds
Partial transcript of Gardner’s KHOW interview this morning:
GARDNER:: [00:00:23] Well, what’s interesting, Ross, is we’re sitting here on Tuesday after having gone through a three day government shutdown, basically under the same agreement that was rejected on Friday night. When it was clear that Senator Schumer wanted to shut the government down and he wasn’t going to provide the votes to do that, he was offered a three week continuing resolution with an agreement to shift to a[n] immigration debate on DACA. This is what to do with children who came here at a very young age, through no fault of their own. And that was rejected. And I think they got into the weekend, they realized that shutting down the government — you know, hurting veterans, hurting active duty military, hurting CDC flu programs, imperiling vital federal research, you know, all of the collateral damage that that could create — actually took people further apart instead of bringing people closer together, making it more difficult to find a solution. And so they agreed to that yesterday. The government reopened. And now we have [un]till February 8th to get a number of things done, including agreement on funding of the federal government for the year, the budget caps that need to get done, along with defense spending. And then if that is all accomplished, I think Senator McConnell has said that he will do what he said he do Friday night, and that’s turn to a debate on the DACA issue.
KAMINSKY:: [00:01:41] So, you’re kind of making it sound like the DACA issue will only come up in the Senate if a whole bunch of other stuff — that isn’t necessarily easy stuff — gets done first. And if I’m hearing you right, then if that other stuff takes a long time and we start getting near the end of this C.R. period and there isn’t progress on DACA, you know, then what are the Democrats going to do?
GARDNER:: [00:02:06] Well, I think that’s exactly the way Senator McConnell laid it out last night. I think what he said was, “Fund the government get it going, and then we’ll turn to immigration issues dealing and relating to DREAMers, DACA.” So, I think that’s what he has said, you know. And it needs to be done because quite frankly, if you don’t do that then you end up in the same situation we are, with another shutdown. And that’s simply unacceptable, too. So I think the promise was made to get that done to — you know, if people agreed to get that done, then just shift to this immigration debate. And I think it’s important that we do, because this needs to be addressed. This problem and challenge we face is not going away. We have to come up with a solution that the President can support.