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US Senator Ted Cruz blocks bill giving Hongkongers special refugee status, citing spy threat from Beijing

A last-minute attempt by US lawmakers to push through legislation that would give Hongkongers special refugee status was thwarted on Friday, following an objection by Republican Senator Ted Cruz.

Taking to the Senate floor to block its approval, Cruz, of Texas, called the legislation an attempt by Democrats "to advance their long-standing goals on changing [US] immigration laws", and claimed that Beijing would exploit relaxed immigration standards to send spies to the US.

Those who would benefit from the bill, called the Hong Kong People's Freedom and Choice Act, would be subject to background security checks.

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Under the bill, Hongkongers would be granted temporary protected status (TPS), joining citizens from 10 other countries including Syria, El Salvador and South Sudan. With TPS, those already living in the US, such as students, would be allowed to stay on in the country past the expiry of their current visa.

Enacted in June, Hong Kong's broad national security law, which can be applied to alleged crimes committed outside the city, has fuelled fears among expatriate Hongkongers that any pro-democracy advocacy work they conduct overseas may put them at risk of arrest should they return.

Beyond offering TPS, the bill would also require expedited processing of political asylum applications from Hongkongers who could demonstrate a well-founded fear of persecution.

Despite its recent unanimous passage in the House of Representatives, Cruz sought to portray the bill as part of Democrats' "partisan political agenda."

With Senators soon to leave Washington for the winter break, Cruz's objection makes it all but certain that the bill will not pass the Senate in time to be sent to the White House before Congress goes on recess, and will have to be reintroduced in January.

Cruz has positioned himself on Capitol Hill as a vocal advocate for Hong Kong's pro-democracy movement, as one of a number of lawmakers, both Republican and Democrat, who have argued for a stronger US policy to counter Beijing.

But the issue of whether to accept more refugees from Hong Kong has exposed cracks in the bipartisan consensus, given Republican Party members' general resistance to pro-immigration policies.

In a hearing on Wednesday to discuss ways the US could provide support to Hongkongers seeking political asylum, Cruz skirted the issue of immigration altogether, instead asking broad questions about witnesses' motivations for opposing Beijing and the prevalence of US flags in Hong Kong's protests.

Recent years have seen the Trump administration slash quotas of political refugees the US can receive, fuelling concerns among critics of a dismantling of the country's long-standing status as a safe haven for those fleeing persecution.

For financial year 2021, the Trump administration has set the refugee ceiling at a historic low of 15,000. By contrast, the final year of the Obama administration saw the quota set at 110,000 refugees.

"America is currently shutting out the most vulnerable, and to me that is disgraceful," said Senator Robert Menendez, Democrat of New Jersey, during Wednesday's hearing.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2020. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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