By Ted Hesson and David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. lawmakers and the White House are discussing what level of border arrests should trigger stringent new asylum rules under a possible border security deal that would also include aid for Ukraine and Israel, a Republican senator said on Wednesday.
Senator Thom Tillis, a Republican involved with bipartisan talks over a border deal, said the White House had offered a proposal that included the creation of a new migrant expulsion authority similar to the COVID-era Title 42 policy.
“The administration has set something forward,” Tillis told reporters. “It’s not a detailed proposal, but it actually does define some of the contours that I think could dramatically reduce future flows.”
A group of Senate lawmakers have been negotiating a border agreement that would be paired with the Ukraine and Israel military aid but face a tight timeline to pass a bill amid opposition from both liberals and conservatives. Lawmakers are scheduled to leave Washington at the end of the week for a three-week holiday break.
The Republican-led House of Representatives has pushed to pair the military aid with an enforcement-focused immigration bill known as H.R. 2., a measure Democrats have opposed.
Tillis said the details of the various policy proposals would be crucial, including what level of daily border arrests should trigger the use of the new expulsion authority.
He said the figure should be less than 3,000 per day, far below the 6,000 per day average in October.
White House spokesperson Angelo Fernandez Hernandez on Tuesday said the administration “has not signed off on any particular policy proposals or final agreements.”
Meanwhile, some Democrats have strongly criticized the White House for being open to new asylum restrictions.
Senator Alex Padilla and Representative Nanette Barragan said in a joint statement that “terrorizing communities across the U.S.” through harsh new immigration enforcement were “nonstarters.”
(Reporting by Ted Hesson and David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone and Grant McCool)