It seems likely now that the Senate's Immigration Reform Bill has passed and is now in the hands of the House of Representatives, momentum to solving the U.S's immigration crisis of more than 11 million undocumented immigrants is quickly coming to a halt.
It seems we've hit a road block between party lines where the pressure is on for Speaker John Boehner to maintain loyalty to his GOP constituents and find less effective solutions that will pacify Democrats and temporarily satisfy the issue at hand. There's no telling which long-term direction immigration reform will go, but one thing is for sure - if Hispanic voters aren't content with the outcome, the Republican Party will continue to suffer for it.
Laura Matthews breaks it down for us in the International Business Times article, "Immigration Reform 2013..."
It seems we've hit a road block between party lines where the pressure is on for Speaker John Boehner to maintain loyalty to his GOP constituents and find less effective solutions that will pacify Democrats and temporarily satisfy the issue at hand. There's no telling which long-term direction immigration reform will go, but one thing is for sure - if Hispanic voters aren't content with the outcome, the Republican Party will continue to suffer for it.
Laura Matthews breaks it down for us in the International Business Times article, "Immigration Reform 2013..."