Welcome to POLITICO’s West Wing Playbook, your guide to the people and power centers in the Biden administration. With help from producer Raymond Rapada. Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Eli | Email Lauren Last night’s unveiling of a bipartisan border bill kicked off a hectic race for the White House and Senate negotiators to sell the legislation before a fast-approaching vote on Wednesday. The White House joined in immediately, releasing a statement from President JOE BIDEN expressing staunch support for the bill, which would implement one of the strictest border and immigration laws in modern history. Senior administration officials then held a press call noting that the bill would provide significant border resources, speed up the asylum system and give Biden the ability to “shut down” the border when it becomes overwhelmed. But what’s as interesting as the provisions they’re touting is one that is getting far less attention. The agreement contains a significant victory for Biden: The president’s humanitarian parole pathways made it out unscathed. “The legislation does not impact the CHNV process at all,” a senior administration official told reporters last night about a parole program for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans. The official only noted as much because they were asked specifically about it. Immigration parole was first established in 1952 and has been used by every Republican and Democratic president since DWIGHT EISENHOWER. It allows the government to grant migrants temporary permission to live and work in the U.S., though there’s no path toward citizenship. And it’s been utilized for humanitarian reasons or for significant public benefit. For a while, it wasn’t clear if it would survive the negotiations. It was a major sticking point in border talks, as Republicans seized on Biden’s unprecedented use of the authority to admit more than 1 million migrants into the U.S. “When we started with this back in October, the Republicans were hell bent on stripping the executive branch and the president of the authority to use the section of the immigration law — the humanitarian parole section — in the way that he has to designate programs for Ukrainians, Afghans and other nationals of other countries to be able to come here” said GREG CHEN, senior director of government relations at the American Immigration Lawyers Association. Biden has used humanitarian parole in a number of ways. In January last year, the president announced a plan that would admit 30,000 people a month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela, if these migrants have a financial sponsor and can fly to the U.S. instead of arriving at the border. As part of this policy, Mexico also accepts 30,000 people a month from these countries. Biden also used parole for Afghans after the fall of Kabul, and to admit thousands of Ukrainians after the Russian invasion. Biden officials believed that eliminating this power would spell disaster in 2024, sending more migrants directly to an already strained border — nearly 2 million people are in line for a chance to enter the United States via the legal pathway, according to an analysis from the Cato Institute’s DAVID J. BIER. So they drew a red line, one that — it appears — was ultimately accepted by Senate negotiators. The new legislation doesn’t touch the tool, nor does it affect Biden’s ability to expand these pathways to other nationalities in the future, Chen said. Immigration policy experts saw it as an indication that Republican and Independent negotiators see these pathways as vital in taking pressure off the border. “It is critical that there is bipartisan agreement and that there is not a new restriction on the president’s parole pathways,” said ANDREA FLORES, vice president for immigration policy and campaigns at FWD.US and a former White House official under Biden, in a call with reporters. “I think that is an important recognition by Leader [Mitch] McConnell, by Sen [James] Lankford that these parole pathways are the future. And that they’ve redirected migration away from the asylum system.” The legislation does limit the scope of the president’s parole authority at the country’s southern and northern borders. Right now, federal immigration officials can release some migrants into the U.S. under parole when the system is overwhelmed. The new bill intends to restrain this process by increasing the level of monitoring and, in some cases, the detention of migrants. The idea is that they’ll be more likely to follow through with various enforcement responsibilities, such as a hearing with an asylum officer. Migrants would also have to meet new specific exemptions to be considered for parole at the border, such as a need for medical assistance. Few people, if any, think that this deal will ultimately pass Congress. And so, to a degree, Biden’s ability to salvage his parole pathways may have been moot. But the White House’s fight to keep the tool was seen by advocacy groups as one silver lining nonetheless. The result, they believe, demonstrated that when Democrats actually stood their ground in negotiations, Republicans backed off of certain demands and an agreement was struck. It was also seen as a sign that the White House does have some red lines as it sorts out the political mess of the migrant crisis. 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