Three House Republicans who have endorsed the Democrats’ comprehensive immigration reform legislation all said they will not sign onto any effort from Democrats to push a floor vote.

Jeff Denham says he wants immigration reform to go through the committee process. | AP Photo
"No, there’s just no way,” said Rep. David Valadao (R-Calif.), who co-sponsored the Democratic immigration bill last fall. “To play politics that way is not the way to get something this serious done.”
2/28/14
By SEUNG MIN KIM
POLITICO
A spokesman for Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) said she would not sign one. And Rep. Jeff Denham (R-Calif.) also said he is a “no” on a discharge petition.
“I am interested in working through the committee process,” he said. “I’m going to continue to pressure and push my conference on coming to a solution and offering other bills.”
The three lawmakers are the only House Republicans who have co-sponsored legislation spearheaded by Democrats that largely takes from the Senate-passed bill, but scales back its border-security provisions.
A discharge petition is a procedural gambit that allows the minority party in the House — in this case, Democrats — to force a vote on the floor over the wishes of the majority leadership. Very few discharge petitions actually succeed, since it is considered a breach of party loyalty to sign onto an effort from the opposing party.
Of course, securing the necessary 218 signatures on a discharge petition wouldn’t be the only goal of Democrats. Lawmakers are also hoping that the existence of a discharge petition on immigration will create enough pressure on Republicans to force the leadership to start moving reform bills on the House floor.
House Democrats, who launched a discharge petition on minimum wage this week, are mulling a similar tactic on immigration. Some allies off Capitol Hill, such as the AFL-CIO, have been pushing them to do a discharge petition on immigration, and a trio of progressive groups began an online petition this week calling on House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to launch the effort. That petition has garnered just over 32,000 signatures as of Friday morning.
Meanwhile, the Democrats’ discharge petition on a federal minimum wage increase now has 189 signatures. As expected, none are Republicans.
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