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REUTERS
WASHINGTON
As another US government funding deadline looms, a huge spending bill is ground zero in the latest battle between Republicans and Democrats in Congress over President Donald Trump's push to toughen immigration policy.
Lawmakers have until March 23 to work out how to fund an array of government agencies for the next six months. But their behind-the-scenes negotiations are complicated by the immigration issue.
Republicans are seeking hundreds of millions of dollars more for the Department of Homeland Security to expand the number of beds for immigrant detainees and to hire more federal agents to patrol US borders and the country's interior that is aimed at finding and potentially deporting more illegal immigrants, a central pledge of Trump's 2016 presidential campaign.
"If you increased the number of beds, the number of people detained in this country will likely be increased," said Sarah Pierce, a policy analyst for the non-partisan Migration Policy Institute.
She said that would help Trump carry out initiatives to expand detentions, including possibly those of children who are in the country illegally. For some immigrants, it could mean spending as long as two years in detention while their cases wind through an overburdened court system, instead of being under looser government controls during the process.
Congressional negotiators also are tussling over a Republican provision prohibiting the use of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement funds to facilitate abortions for immigrant detainees.
There is also a push for $1.6 billion to begin construction on a border wall, which Trump promised during his campaign would be paid for by Mexico, an unwilling partner in that pledge. That would be a down payment on a construction project likely to end up costing more than $18 billion.
During a visit to California on Tuesday, Trump inspected wall prototypes and urged Congress to fund it.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, an advocate for Trump's immigration agenda, told reporters on Wednesday,"If there are additional appropriations added, I certainly would be supportive of that."
Democrats, whose votes in the Republican-controlled Congress are likely needed to pass the trillion-dollar spending bill, are pushing back against a wall that they see as a waste of money.
A coalition of 83 Hispanic, African-American and Asian-American members of the House of Representatives wrote this week to congressional leaders urging them to also"reduce funding to DHS's detention and deportation machine."
Democratic Representative Michelle Lujan Grisham, who heads the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, told reporters:"It's wasteful and it's harmfully targeting and deporting non-criminal immigrants, separating families and terrorizing frankly whole communities."
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17/03/2018
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