In one of her first days in Congress nearly two decades ago, Rep. Linda Sánchez remembers being told by a friend on Capitol Hill that there are two types of lawmakers: a workhorse or a showhorse.
Sánchez said she's the kind of lawmaker who wants to get things done.
Now, the California congresswoman has taken the lead in putting together a group of seven women, who she described as “workhorses,” who will shepherd the legislative efforts to get President Joe Biden’s immigration reform bill through the House of Representatives.
"I can unequivocally say that every woman that is part of this 'Closers' group is a workhorse," Sánchez said in an interview with USA TODAY. "They're not doing it for the glory or for the credit. They are in it to get (immigration reform) done once and for all. It's long overdue."
Biden has called for an eight-year pathway to citizenship for the nearly 11 million immigrants living in the United States without legal status, a shorter process to legal status for agriculture workers and recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, and an enforcement plan that includes deploying technology to patrol the border.