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US Senate heads for crucial immigration vote

Washington, Jun 28: The US Senate heads for a make-or-break vote today on President George W Bush's plan to overhaul immigration laws after Senate leaders battled to fend off efforts by opponents to derail the bill.

The ultimate fate of the bill remained in doubt as the Senate prepared to decide today whether to bring debate to a close and move toward a final vote on the controversial legislation that would legalize millions of unlawful immigrants.

Supporters need 60 votes in the 100-member Senate to push the bill toward a final vote and they expect today's tally to be close.

The bill's backers on Wednesday were able to kill a number of amendments they said would have undermined the fragile compromise crafted during months of negotiations by a group of Democrats and Republicans and the White House.

But they were unable to block a key amendment that would change worker identification requirements, casting doubt on the final outcome of the bill.

Bush has sought an overhaul of US immigration laws for years and this bill may be his last chance for a significant domestic legislative victory before leaving office when his second term ends in a year and a half.

But the president has encountered fierce opposition from many fellow Republicans who say it would do little to stem the flow of illegal immigration into the United States.

The bill ties tough border-security and workplace- enforcement measures to a plan to legalize an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants and create a temporary worker program sought by business groups.

If supporters fail today to win the 60 votes needed to advance legislation in the Senate, lawmakers are unlikely to return to comprehensive immigration reform before next year's presidential election.

Immigration has already become an issue in the campaign and if the bill does pass the Senate, it faces even stiffer opposition from Republicans in the House of Representatives.

The bill is also opposed by some labor unions, who say its temporary worker program will create an underclass of cheap laborers.

Immigrant groups object to the bill's limits on family migration but many want to see it move on to the Democrat-controlled House where they hope to get something more to their liking.

Josefina Sanchez, a Mexican hotel worker who has lived in the United States for 19 years and is in the process of becoming a US citizen, said she was glad the bill was still alive in the Senate.

''We are living in suspense but remain hopeful,'' she told Reuters by telephone from a migrant welfare center in Phoenix. ''It offers immigrants the hope of finally being able to live and work without fear of deportation.''

Reuters>
 
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Japan freezes Iranian assets over nuclear plan

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