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Rubio has immigration plans

He said Congress should take a series of steps, rather than reaching one deal.

WASHINGTON - Sen. Marco Rubio (R., Fla.) said Wednesday that he wants to tackle small parts of immigration reform before addressing how to create a pathway to legal status for most illegal immigrants in the United States.

Rather than working on one comprehensive bill, Congress should pass a series of bills that help foreign entrepreneurs, technology workers, agricultural workers and those who were brought to the United States unlawfully as children, Rubio said while speaking at a public event sponsored by the news organization Politico.

"Portions of immigration reform can be dealt with quicker than others," he said.

Since a surge in Latino voter turnout tipped the election in President Obama's favor, a chorus of Republican strategists have called for the party to rethink its approach to immigration.

The 41-year-old first-term senator from Florida is widely seen as a future presidential contender and is expected to be an important Republican voice in the debate on how to reform the immigration system early next year.

Rubio's insistence that lawmakers start with smaller pieces of immigration reform rather than hold out for a single compromise puts him at odds with Senate Democrats and White House officials who have said that any immigration bill next year will have to create a pathway to legal status for most illegal immigrants already in the United States.

Obama promised in his first news conference after the election to turn to immigration reform "very soon" after his inauguration.

Rubio said he was optimistic about getting something done and put the chances of ultimately creating a pathway to citizenship for some illegal immigrants in the next two years at more than 50 percent.

Rubio said that the party needs to change the way it talks about immigrants.