Sen. Kennedy Wasn't Sure He Was Going to Say This on the Senate...
Justice Jackson Was the Lone Dissenter in This Case, and She Was Not...
That Atlantic Hit Piece on Kash Patel Just Got Worse
Law Professor Is Very Worried About This Trend Among Elected Dems
Bill Maher Is Still Annoyed Hollywood Hates This Actor Because of Politics
ActBlue’s Legal Troubles Are Mounting
Tom Steyer Might Be California's Next Governor, and He Once Wanted President Trump...
This Wrong Way Driver Killed an LA Sheriff Recruit, Injured Several Others. He'll...
Kamala Harris Has Adopted Another Fake Accent
Senator Chris Murphy Is Rooting for Iran and Here's the Proof
Illinois Jury Lists Contain Dead People. What About the Voter Rolls? – The...
Here's What Was on That Seized Iranian Tanker
Gutfeld Blasts Gov Tim Walz As a 'Traitor' for Attacking Trump on Foreign...
Shocking Undercover Videos Expose Horrors of Joe Biden’s Unaccompanied Child Trafficking S...
Congress Cleaned House — Under Duress
Tipsheet

Paul Ryan: Immigration Reform is a Question of 'When' Not 'If'

Paul Ryan: Immigration Reform is a Question of 'When' Not 'If'

“To me, it’s not a question of ‘if’ we fix our broken immigration laws,” Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan said Wednesday, “it’s really a question of ‘when.’” Ryan, who was making the economic case for reforming our nation’s immigration system, was speaking at a breakfast hosted by the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.

Advertisement

Ryan called the nation’s immigration laws “chief” among the problems that are curbing economic growth. Noting the rate of retirement among baby boomers, Ryan said reforming the immigration system is necessary to fill future jobs.

“Please know that we understand the value of immigration,” Ryan told the crowd. “We know its importance; we know its roots, its history here in America; and we have ideas on how to make this go forward and make it work so that we do have the rule of law, so that we do have reform, so that we’re not in the same position 15 years down the road.”

House Republican leaders signaled earlier this year that they were ready to move forward on immigration reform — months after the Democratic-led Senate passed a complete overhaul with a pathway to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants.

But the GOP quickly extinguished the chances that immigration will get done this year, citing skepticism that President Barack Obama will enforce any laws that Congress writes. Republicans are also reluctant to take on a divisive issue such as immigration during an election year in which they will almost certainly retain control of the House and have a good chance at capturing the Senate.

Advertisement


Earlier this month, Ryan said in an interview with his local newspaper that GOP leaders “don’t have the votes right now” to pass immigration reform. “Right now, we’re working hard to find where that consensus lies”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement