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Some Republicans call on party to embrace immigration reform

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Their plan would create a new, tamper-proof biometric Social Security card, enact stiff fines and prison sentences for employers who repeatedly hire illegal immigrants, and grant automatic green cards to foreigners who graduate from U.S. universities with advanced degrees in high-tech fields.

“We’ve got to reform our message as it relates to immigration,” said Republican Rep. Richard Nugent, a former county sheriff from Florida’s northwestern Gulf Coast. “I would hope after this national election we’ve learned.”

But some Republicans, including Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Susan Collins of Maine, have set their sights on a narrower approach: passing a version of the Dream Act that would create a path to citizenship for people brought to the U.S. unlawfully as children.

“I think it’s very obvious that our party needs to take major steps to improve its outreach to women, to younger voters, to Latino voters, and I believe that we should start with the Dream Act bill,” Collins said. Although she voted against the Dream Act in 2010, she said her objections could be overcome.

But top Senate Democrats and White House officials think the Dream Act would not go far enough toward solving the central problem: what to do with the millions of people in the country unlawfully. Young people who would qualify for the Dream Act already can apply for work permits under the administration’s deferred-action program, which began in August.

“We aren’t going to get a second chance to do this bill and we want to do this the right way,” said Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., who talked to Graham last week about working on a comprehensive bill that includes a broad path to legal status.

The White House plans to rally groups that have clout with conservatives — such as business leaders, evangelical Christians, Catholic leaders, police associations and state governors — in hopes of creating political momentum for immigration reform, and political cover for Republican lawmakers.

In addition, a handful of key conservative voices outside Congress, including Rupert Murdoch, Sean Hannity and Charles Krauthammer, have said since the election that they favor a path to legal status for illegal immigrants as a way to wrest the issue from the Democratic Party.

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