Immigration Bill Passed By House Speeds Deportation Of Immigrant Children

Republicans in the House of Representatives voted to crack down on Central American migrants, including unaccompanied children, who are flooding to the U.S. border with Mexico, passing a $694 million border security bill speeding their deportations back home, according to The Associated Press.

The 223-189 vote came one day after conservative Republicans balked at an earlier version of the measure, exposing a deep rift between Tea Party activists and more mainstream Republicans, the AP reported.

House Democrats complained that the legislation would too speedily return children to dangerous conditions in their home countries, according to the AP. President Barack Obama called the Republican bill "extreme" and "unworkable."

Later on Friday, the House also passed a separate bill reversing Obama's 2012 policy suspending deportations of some undocumented residents who were brought to the United States as children years ago by their parents, the AP reported. The measure also would bar Obama from expanding this policy, possibly to parents of children who already qualify.

The tougher language in the twin bills would make it easier to deport migrant children and add money to deploy National Guard troops at the border with Mexico, according to the AP.

On Thursday, the Democratic-controlled Senate failed to advance its own $2.7 billion border funding bill, as Republicans lined up to stop it on a procedural vote, the AP reported.

With Obama's $3.7 billion border funding request rejected by Congress, but no alternative legislation presented to him for signing into law, Obama said he would shift funds from other accounts to pay for enhanced border security and the care and feeding of thousands of detained migrant children, according to the AP.

"I'm going to have to act alone because we don't have enough resources," Obama told reporters, the AP reported. "We've already been very clear. We've run out of money."

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