Dem, GOP senators aim to breathe life into immigration debate by introducing narrow DACA bill with no wall

Trump calls the McCain-Coons bill a "total waste of time" without a wall.

— -- A bipartisan pair of senators today introduced a bill addressing a pressing issue as Congress continues to debate the future of U.S. immigration policy: what to do about the so-called Dreamers, undocumented immigrants who were brought to America as young children.

During a conference call with reporters today, Coons said he hopes the legislation, which is the Senate version of a House bill authored by Reps. Will Hurd, R-Texas, and Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., can serve as a “base bill” if the other negotiating groups are unable to a compromise.

“I don’t think we should do anything less than what’s in McCain-Coons. And it is my hope over the next few days of negotiating that we do something more,” Coons said.

The House version already has 27 Republican co-sponsors, Coons noted. He suggested that bodes well for the bill's ability to get bipartisan in the Senate, where other immigration proposals have failed to garner broad support from both parties.

“It’s time we end the gridlock so we can quickly move on to completing a long-term budget agreement that provides our men and women in uniform the support they deserve,“ he said.

The McCain-Coons bill, like Hurd-Aguilar in the House, would offer a path to citizenship for about the same amount of undocumented childhood arrivals that Trump has proposed, 1.8 million. It would also commission a strategy from DHS for securing the border by 2020 and fund efforts to improve coordination between local and federal law enforcement and border patrol officials.

Finally, the bill would fund efforts to clear up an immigration backlog and to address the core causes of illegal immigration from Central America.