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Know Your Rights
Source: WNYC Public Radio
Subject: Immigration
Type: Media Coverage

House Passes DREAM Act, Senate Tables It

Less than 24 hours after the House passed the DREAM Act on Wednesday by a margin of 216-198, the Senate voted to table its version of the bill, and will most likely take up the House version next week. Postponing the vote was a strategic decision because Republicans had threatened to filibuster if the DREAM Act came up before a vote to extend tax-cuts.

The legislation would allow young undocumented immigrants to apply for citizenship if they attend college or enter the armed forces for two years. Dream Act advocates have been holding vigils and hunger strikes this week to press for passage. President Obama supports the bill.

The vast majority of the New York Representatives voted for the DREAM Act. Out of the five who did not, three were Democrats: Michael Arcuri (D-24), Brian Higgins (D-27), and Bill Owens (D-23). The Republicans were Peter King (R-3) and Chris Lee (R-26).

Supporters were cheered by last week’s Congressional Budget Office report that estimated the DREAM act would generate $2.3 billion in tax revenue due with the addition of 800,000 workers and cut the deficit by $1.4 million over the next ten years. But opponents said that the bill would increase projected deficits by between $5 billion and $20 billion between 2021 and 2061.

Undocumented immigrants who are under the age of 30, who came to the United States before the age of 16 and have lived here for five consecutive years with clean records would be eligible for the DREAM Act. This is the fifth – and most restrictive – version of the bill that has been introduced in Congress so far. Applicants for citizenship would have to remain in conditional non-immigrant status for ten years before they could apply for naturalization.

In Bushwick Brooklyn, youth organizers with Make the Road New York were avidly following proceedings. Natalia Aristizabal says young people have been texting her from school to find out what happened. When she tells them the vote was postponed, "They reply, saying, ‘But why!’ And they’re, like, sad. But I have to explain to them that this is actually a good thing." Now, Aristizabal says, they have more time to fill the voice-mails of 10 Republicans and Democrats whose yea votes could turn the Dream Act into a reality.

The decision to table discussion does not rule out a Senate vote before the end of the lame duck session, but it will face a tough fight to win 60 votes.