Gay Support Still very Strong for Gay Partner Immigration
Lawmakers supporting a bipartisan bill in the Senate to overhaul the immigration system faced a surge of outrage last week from gay rights advocates after a provision those groups supported was left off the legislation in committee at the last minute.
Advocates focused their fury on several Democrats on the Judiciary Committee, which considered more than 300 amendments to the bill, after the senators warned the chairman, Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, that they would not vote for an amendment he wanted to introduce. The measure by Mr. Leahy, also a Democrat, would have allowed American citizens to seek permanent resident status — a document known as a green card — for a foreign same-sex partners
But as the bill now moves to the Senate floor, the political damage from the episode for the Democrats — including senators who have been firm allies of gay causes like Mr. Leahy, Charles E. Schumer of New York and Richard J. Durbin of Illinois — may not be as severe as it first appeared. Gay rights advocates, stepping back from the loss, said the overhaul still contained many measures that could benefit gay immigrants, most of which came through the committee gantlet unscathed.
Other provisions that the committee agreed to add to the bill, dealing with asylum and immigration detention, had been the subject of vigorous lobbying by gay organizations.
The committee outcome was a relief for Republicans in the bipartisan group of eight senators that wrote the bill, who had said the same-sex amendment would cripple the entire measure. By fending it off, Republicans held on to crucial support from evangelical Christians and Roman Catholics.
“To try to redefine marriage within the immigration bill would mean the bill would fall apart,” Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a Republican, told Mr. Leahy in the moments of high suspense last Tuesday evening before the Vermont senator announced his decision. Mr. Graham said support from conservative evangelical churches, which have put on an ambitious campaign to pass the overhaul, “made it possible for a guy like me to survive the emotional nature of this debate.”
One activist who had intensely mixed feelings about the committee’s results was Felipe Sousa-Rodriguez, co-director of Get Equal, an organization that seeks legal equality for gay people.
“I can’t deny my outrage when I felt betrayed,” said Mr. Sousa-Rodriguez, who said he had delivered thousands of petitions to Mr. Schumer’s Washington office just a week earlier.
But he said he was ready to push for the bill on the Senate floor, where lawmakers expect to take it up the week of June 10. “Many of my friends will benefit from the overall legislation,” he said.
Like many gay advocates, Mr. Sousa-Rodriguez, who was born in Brazil, sees the legislation from several angles. He is one of as many as 1.7 million young immigrants who were brought here illegally as children. Those immigrants would be eligible under the Senate bill for an accelerated five-year path to citizenship. They include a vocal contingent of youths who are gay.
But Mr. Sousa-Rodriguez is also legally married to an immigrant from Colombia, Juan, who is about to become an American citizen. If the same-sex amendment were to become law, Mr. Sousa-Rodriguez’s husband could seek a green card for him immediately, without waiting five years. In the Judiciary Committee debate, Mr. Leahy kept everyone, including his own staff, wondering until the final hour whether he would formally introduce the same-sex amendment. He had sponsored similar legislation many times in the Senate, and he left no doubt in his opening statement about his strong support for the provision.
But then he turned to the other senators on the committee, asking them for their views. In agonized comments the Democrats, also including Dianne Feinstein of California and Al Franken of Minnesota, replayed the Republican warnings that the measure would be a deal breaker.
According to several Senate aides, the Democrats were surprised and miffed that Mr. Leahy shifted the burden to them to nix the amendment.
“He did it in a way that made others walk the plank and kept his hands clean,” one Democratic aide said, “and that was not appreciated.”
In the end Mr. Leahy withheld his amendment, leaving open the option of introducing it later. The committee sent the bill to the Senate floor on a strong bipartisan vote.
President Obama had also urged the senators not to allow the same-sex measure to torpedo the bill, which he strongly supports. But he had worked behind the scenes, so he largely avoided the advocates’ ire.
Mr. Schumer, one of the senators in the so-called Gang of Eight who wrote the legislation, took to the phones to reassure gay advocates, pledging to build support among Republicans so the amendment could be added during the floor debate.
The advocates told Mr. Schumer and other lawmakers they were still committed to passing the legislation.
“There are many provisions in this bill that our community cares about deeply, not the least of which is a baseline path to citizenship,” said Rea Carey, the executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. “I am deeply disappointed that binational couples were not included, and we will continue to push for that. But we will remain in this fight.”
As many as 267,000 illegal immigrants are gay, activists said, citing an estimate by the Williams Institute at the law school of the University of California, Los Angeles. Under the overhaul bill, those immigrants would be eligible for provisional legal status and eventually American citizenship.
The bill would also eliminate a one-year deadline for filing asylum claims, which gay advocates have long challenged, saying it effectively excludes many foreigners fleeing persecution because of sexual orientation.
In the committee, Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, a Democrat, added several amendments gay groups had sought, to limit solitary confinement and ban discrimination in immigration detention.
Democrats are hoping the larger issues addressed by Mr. Leahy’s amendment will be resolved by the Supreme Court, when it issues a ruling this month on a federal law that defines marriage as only between a man and a woman.
Evangelical Christian and Catholic leaders said they would continue to resist any inclusion of same-sex issues in the immigration overhaul.
“It was really remarkable that we saw the Gang of Eight come together to oppose any poison pill amendments that would derail passage of the bill,” said Galen Carey, vice president for government relations of the National Association of Evangelicals. “There are other forums where these very basic issues can be debated. This is not the time for that debate.”
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