GOP Stays Silent On Deporting Americans In Unusual Immigration Markup
By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/02 22:15:01
0
Share
The dome of the U.S. Capitol Building is seen on November 16, 2022. House Republicans stayed silent ... More during an unusual immigration bill markup and opposed an amendment to prohibit deporting U.S. citizens. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) House Judiciary Committee Republicans weathered a blizzard of Democratic amendments to pass sweeping immigration measures as part of a reconciliation bill. The legislation features provisions to increase the detention and deportation of immigrants. Republicans remained silent during the markup and voted against Democratic amendments requiring immigrants to receive due process and prohibiting Immigration and Customs Enforcement from detaining and deporting U.S. citizens. Economist Mark Regets, a senior fellow at the National Foundation for American Policy, estimates the $45 billion in new detention funding in the bill is enough to detain 5 million people or at least 1 million a year over five years. An Extraordinary Immigration Markup Begins Normally On April 30, 2025, Chairman Jim Jordan (R-OH) began the markup of the House Judiciary Committee’s part of the Republican reconciliation bill with an expected opening statement. He accused the Biden administration of deliberately allowing in millions of undocumented immigrants and said voters gave Donald Trump and Republicans a mandate to secure the border and communities. Republicans are using reconciliation to avoid a filibuster in the Senate. Jordan continued his statement by highlighting the bill’s $45 billion in detention funding, $8 billion to hire 10,000 additional ICE agents and support staff, $14 billion in transportation spending to deport 1 million immigrants annually and unprecedented fees of at least $1,000 levied on applicants for asylum and parole and $500 for Temporary Protected Status. The fees, designed to raise money and deter applications, include a minimum of $550 for 6-month work permits for TPS, asylum and parole applicants. Republicans Vote Against Requiring Due Process At The Immigration Markup For a time, the markup continued in the expected fashion. Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD), the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, delivered an opening statement followed by other Democratic members of the committee. Raskin set the tone by criticizing the Trump administration for high-profile arrests and deportations that appeared to go beyond the law and denied due process to individuals. “Every day, the administration uses immigration enforcement as a template to violate and erode our rights and liberties,” said Raskin. “They round up people in the street and disappear them to the torture prison of a foreign dictator without one iota of due process, sweeping up completely innocent people who have no criminal record and no criminal charges. “They strip college and graduate students at American universities of their student visas for writing op-eds the administration disagrees with. They invoke emergency wartime powers like the Alien Enemies Act to fight an invasion at the southern border while telling us that the border is already safer than it has ever been.” Raskin argued, “The Trump administration has abandoned the rule of law. If Donald Trump can sweep noncitizens off the street and fly them to a torturer’s prison in El Salvador with no due process, he can do it to citizens too, because if there is no due process, no fair hearing, you have no opportunity to object. And indeed, several American citizen children, including one with cancer, were flown to Honduras with no due process, as a Trump-appointed judge in Louisiana found.” The markup changed when Raskin offered the first amendment to the bill. The amendment read: “None of the funds made available by this subtitle may be used to detain or remove an alien in violation of their rights under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution.” Raskin said many Americans would wonder why the amendment was necessary since the right to due process is in the Bill of Rights, and the Supreme Court confirmed it in a recent opinion. He quoted the Supreme Court: “It is well established that the Fifth Amendment entitles aliens to due process of law in the context of removal proceedings.” Raskin said the amendment was necessary because members of the Trump administration “believe people can be swept up . . . and sent to a torturer’s prison in El Salvador without any due process at all, and there they can remain for the rest of their lives.” Raskin pointed to federal judges who said that if that could be done to noncitizens, it could also be done to citizens. “Because if you assert as your defense that you’re a citizen, but you don’t have the opportunity to get before a court . . . they still get away with taking you out of the country.” Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) offered examples of students and others swept up by ICE actions. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) spoke in front of a poster of a Rolling Stone article with the headline: “Trump Has Now Deported Multiple U.S. Citizen Children With Cancer.” Rep. Hank Johnson (D-GA) paraphrased the famous poem by German Pastor Martin Niemöller, which begins with, “First they came for the Communists, and I did not speak out.” Rep. Becca Balint (D-VT) showed a harrowing video of a news report that began, “A family is traumatized after armed federal agents busted into their home as they were sleeping and took almost everything they owned.” The U.S. citizen family, a woman and her young daughters, moved to Oklahoma only two weeks earlier. The reporter said, “They told federal immigration agents they had the wrong people, but those agents kept treating them like criminals, even though they are all U.S. citizens.” The news report featured the crying mother, who said, “I did feel at times that I was going to die. . . . I kept praying to God, please let me live through this moment.” No Republican debated the amendment, nor did any Republicans vote for the amendment. That was the pattern throughout the entire markup. Democrats offered more than a dozen amendments, and each time, Republicans stayed silent and voted no. Every Democratic amendment failed on a party-line vote. Halfway through the markup, Democrats attempted to bait their Republican colleagues into responding, yet each GOP member remained silent. Democrats tried asking for a show of hands on some issues, but the Republican committee members still did not reply. Rep. Swalwell asked Chairman Jordan if he could do a “wellness check” on Rep. Kevin Kiley (R-CA) because he was not in the committee room but was “tweeting.” An ICE agent monitors asylum seekers being processed upon entering the Jacob K. Javits Federal ... More Building on June 6, 2023, in New York City. (Photo by David Dee Delgado/Getty Images) Republicans Vote Against Ensuring ICE Does Not Deport U.S. Citizens Rep. Jayapal, the ranking member of the Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement, offered the markup’s second amendment. The amendment read: “None of the funds made available by this subtitle may be used by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain or deport a United States citizen.” “Whether you’re a Democrat or a Republican, I hope we can all agree that U.S. citizens should never be detained by ICE or any agency conducting civil immigration enforcement,” said Jayapal. “They certainly should not be deported.” She pointed to an ICE policy memo that stated the agency did not have the authority to detain U.S. citizens. “And yet since the second Trump administration began, a troubling pattern has emerged with U.S. citizens being detained by immigration authorities.” Jayapal provided examples of U.S. citizens detained by ICE, including a toddler, mother and grandmother shopping in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, sent to an ICE detention center because immigration agents questioned their status after hearing them speaking Spanish. Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon (D-PA), Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL) and other Democratic members spoke in favor of the amendment. As with the Raskin amendment, not one Republican voted for the amendment prohibiting ICE from detaining or deporting U.S. citizens, nor did any Republican members speak before the vote. Republican House Judiciary Committee members may have arguments against the amendments on requiring due process for aliens before deportation and ensuring ICE does not detain or deport U.S. citizens. During this unusual markup, they never explained why they voted against the amendments, making it impossible to know. Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/stuartanderson/2025/05/02/gop-stays-silent-on-deporting-americans-in-unusual-immigration-markup/
You may also like

Morning Report | DeepSeek completes over $7 billion in financing, with a valuation exceeding $50 billion; Musk's personal wealth has surpassed the total market value of Bitcoin
Overview of Important Market Events on June 16

SharpLink CEO: How to understand that Ethereum developers have just surpassed 1 million?
The most important question in the cryptocurrency industry is not which chain is the fastest, but rather where top builders choose to build in the long term. Ethereum has just surpassed one million cumulative developers; what does this number mean?

Morning Report | MiCA grace period expires on July 1; Kalshi's trading volume in the first week of the World Cup breaks $5.1 billion, setting a record
Overview of Important Market Events on June 15

The foundation of SpaceX's trillion-dollar valuation: Who is dividing Musk's annual capital expenditure of tens of billions?
SpaceX Supply Chain Revealed: The Invisible Gold Mine Behind the Trillion-Dollar "Space Dream," from Nvidia's Computing Power Monopoly to China's Sole Supplier of Special Materials, these overlooked water-selling talents are the true wealth creation engine.

How to exit after asset tokenization?
Currently, three models have emerged, aimed at providing instant exit routes for tokenized real-world assets. Their differences lie in: who holds the funds required for exit, how efficiently the funds operate, and the extent to which this model can be scaled across different asset types.

The stablecoin positioning battle escalates: When compliance is just a ticket to entry, will USD1 become the biggest winner?
How does the GENIUS Act reshape the stablecoin landscape?

A16Z: The sun bears witness, SpaceX is worth 7.5 trillion
A deep analysis of Musk's ultimate grand vision: how SpaceX, xAI, and Tesla are deeply intertwined, using space AI data centers and Starships to gradually turn the sci-fi fantasies of Mars colonization and multi-planetary civilization into reality.

Mergers and acquisitions in the cryptocurrency market are exceptionally active
Behind the rise in mergers and acquisitions is a sluggish financing market, declining project valuations, and increased pressure for startup teams to exit. However, it also indicates that the cryptocurrency industry has not lost its capital vitality, but is completing resource reorganization in anot...

Concerns Behind the Binance Customer Service Controversy
As the user base expands to the scale of Binance today, relying on the personal efforts of the founder and a few employees to fill process gaps has become an unsustainable arrangement.

SpaceX Stock Prediction After the IPO: Can SPCX Reach $200 Before QQQ Inclusion?
SpaceX stock has become one of the hottest trades of 2026. Can SPCX reach $200 before QQQ inclusion? Discover the latest SpaceX stock prediction, analyst targets, Bitcoin exposure, and the key catalysts that could move SpaceX stock after its historic IPO.

Congratulations to Carl Moon on His Historic Ferrari Challenge Le Mans Podium Triumph
Crypto influencer and racing enthusiast Carl Moon finished third in the Ferrari Challenge Le Mans Coppa Shell class, marking his best result of the year. As his racing partner and sponsor, WEEX celebrates this remarkable achievement and continues to lead crypto’s journey beyond boundaries, uniting the innovation of digital assets with the passion of motorsport.

Can the CLARITY Act Become Law by July 4? Everything You Need to Know About the Final Battle
The CLARITY Act has cleared a major Senate hurdle, but the hardest battle is still ahead. With the July 4 deadline approaching, can the White House finally pass its biggest crypto regulation bill? Find the clues in our exclusive analysis below.

France vs Senegal World Cup 2026: Mbappe’s New Era Begins Against a Historic Rival
France vs Senegal World Cup 2026 preview: Can Mbappe lead France past Senegal after the shocking 2002 World Cup defeat? Full team news, predicted lineups, key battles, and WEEX's exclusive match prediction.

What is the connection between Huang Zheng of Pinduoduo and blockchain?
From Pinduoduo's "reverse insurance" to blockchain's smart contracts, this article explains how Huang Zheng's underlying logic uses "certainty" rules to reshape the flow of wealth for ordinary people.

Morning Report | Prediction market platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket jointly sue Kentucky over 14.25% trading tax; Bridgewater founder discusses decision-making in the AI era: principled thinking should run parallel to AI, human insight remains irre...
Overview of Important Market Events on June 15

If the AI bubble has already burst, who will truly remain?
What remains after the AI bubble bursts? The plummeting cost of computing power is driving AI to accelerate the reshaping of various industries. What will be left after the major reshuffle is an irreversible revolution in real productivity.

Paul Graham: How to Make a Billion Dollars
Silicon Valley guru Paul Graham reveals the underlying logic of billion-dollar wealth: no need to cheat, just create products that users love intensely, allowing exponential growth to create wealth miracles.

After 18 years, blockchain has finally started to head towards the main channel
When AI becomes the new center of gravity in the capital market, the response of crypto VCs is not to stick to "Crypto-only," but to repackage crypto as the financial track, ownership layer, and autonomous system infrastructure of the AI era.
Morning Report | DeepSeek completes over $7 billion in financing, with a valuation exceeding $50 billion; Musk's personal wealth has surpassed the total market value of Bitcoin
Overview of Important Market Events on June 16
SharpLink CEO: How to understand that Ethereum developers have just surpassed 1 million?
The most important question in the cryptocurrency industry is not which chain is the fastest, but rather where top builders choose to build in the long term. Ethereum has just surpassed one million cumulative developers; what does this number mean?
Morning Report | MiCA grace period expires on July 1; Kalshi's trading volume in the first week of the World Cup breaks $5.1 billion, setting a record
Overview of Important Market Events on June 15
The foundation of SpaceX's trillion-dollar valuation: Who is dividing Musk's annual capital expenditure of tens of billions?
SpaceX Supply Chain Revealed: The Invisible Gold Mine Behind the Trillion-Dollar "Space Dream," from Nvidia's Computing Power Monopoly to China's Sole Supplier of Special Materials, these overlooked water-selling talents are the true wealth creation engine.
How to exit after asset tokenization?
Currently, three models have emerged, aimed at providing instant exit routes for tokenized real-world assets. Their differences lie in: who holds the funds required for exit, how efficiently the funds operate, and the extent to which this model can be scaled across different asset types.
The stablecoin positioning battle escalates: When compliance is just a ticket to entry, will USD1 become the biggest winner?
How does the GENIUS Act reshape the stablecoin landscape?
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com
