WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden's immigration agenda suffered another blow Wednesday as the Senate parliamentarian rejected a plan that could have created a pathway to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants.
A Democratic Senate aide told USA TODAY that the parliamentarian rejected a proposal that would have included a date change to the immigration registry.
The immigration registry was created under the Registry Act of 1929, which created a process for immigrants to apply for a green card. Those who currently qualify for the registry must have maintained continuous presence in the United States and were of "good moral character" before January 1, 1972. Democrats presented a plan to the parliamentarian to change the immigration registry date to 2010.
According to FWD.US, 6.7 million people would be eligible for permanent residency if the registry date had been changed to 2010.
Democrats are not planning immediately to reconvene to discuss a "Plan C," the Senate aide said.
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This is the second setback Democrats have faced in trying to include immigration in the reconciliation package.
Earlier this month, Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough rejected including a pathway to citizenship for Dreamers, farmworkers and essential workers in the reconciliation package.
When asked about the parliamentarian's ruling, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said members of Congress "have indicated that they are committed to getting immigration reform done."
Congress has struggled to pass immigration reform for decades, with the last major reform passed in 1986.
The last comprehensive bill, sponsored by a group of bipartisan senators, was brought up in 2013, where it passed in the Senate but died in the House.
Earlier this year, the House passed two bills that would provide a pathway to citizenship for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), a program that allows undocumented people brought to the country as children to stay, and for farmworkers. Neither bill has been brought up by the Senate.
Psaki said that Congress will likely have to look at what other options are available to get immigration reform passed.
"We are committed to getting immigration reform done," she said. "This, I expect, would renew a look for what the vehicles and options may be.”
Reach Rebecca Morin at Twitter @RebeccaMorin_
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