Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
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Do read this carefully.
Immigration Bill Is Worse Than You Think by Sen. Jeff Sessions
Posted May 25, 2006 Editor?s Note: Sen. Jeff Sessions (R.-Ala.), a member of the
Senate Judiciary Committee, offered a devastating analysis on
the Senate immigration bill in a speech delivered on the
Senate floor on Tuesday, May 23. Sessions pointed to
shocking elements of the bill that were hidden deep in its
text. These include, for example, that the employers of illegal
aliens would be given an amnesty for cheating on their taxes,
and that under the terms of the law the government would for
all practical purposes have to take an illegal alien?s word for it
that he has been in the country illegally long enough to
qualify for an amnesty. Sessions also pointed to some of the tremendous hidden
costs of the bill, including the $500 billion in additional
welfare payments it will cost American taxpayers in the period
10 to 20 years after its passage. Senators who vote for the bill today cannot credibly claim later
they were unaware of the elements and consequences that
Sen. Session?s outlined in this speech.
I am going to take some time tonight to inform my colleagues
about some of the problems with the legislation before us. It
is worse than you think, colleagues. The legislation has an incredible number of problems with it.
Some, as I will point out tonight, can only be considered
deliberate. Whereas on the one hand it has nice words with
good sounding phrases in it to do good things, on the second
hand it completely eviscerates that, oftentimes in a way that
only the most careful reading by a good lawyer would
discover. So I feel like I have to fulfill my duty. I was on the
Judiciary Committee. We went into this. We tried to monitor it
and study it and actually read this 614-page bill, and I have a
responsibility and I am going to fulfill my responsibility. I think the things I am saying tonight ought to disturb people.
They ought to be unhappy about it. It ought to make them
consider whether they want to vote for this piece of legislation
that, in my opinion, should never, ever become law. I would also just point out I will be offering tomorrow, or
soon, an amendment to deal with the earned-income tax
credit situation that is raised by this legislation, focusing on
the amnesty in the bill and what will happen after amnesty is
granted, before they become a full citizen. The Congressional
Budget Office has concluded that the earned-income tax
credit will pay out to those who came into our country illegally
$29 billion over 10 years. The earned-income tax credit has
been on the books for some time. It is a good bit larger than
most people think. The average recipient of it receives
$1,700. Lower-income people get a larger amount. Over half
the people who we expect will receive amnesty are without a
high school degree. They are receiving lower wages. They will
be the ones who will particularly qualify for this. This is a
score that has been given to us by the group that is supposed
to score it?$29 billion will be paid out. If they go all the way and become a citizen they will be
entitled to this like any other citizen, and they will be entitled
to get it under my amendment. But I do not believe we should
award people who have entered our country illegally,
submitted a false Social Security number, worked illegally?I do
not believe we should reward them with $29 billion of the
taxpayers? money. That is a lot of money. I will also be offering a budget point of order, I or one of my
colleagues will, in the next day or so. We have been working
on that. We asked for a report. The Congressional Budget
Office has concluded that the budget point of order lies in the
first 10 years of this bill. It also concludes that it lies under
the long-term provisions of the budget points of order for
expenditures in the outyears. They didn?t give us those
numbers, but they said, without much work?they didn?t have
to do much work?the numbers are going to be much worse in
the outyears. It clearly would be a detriment to the
Government and these figures would exceed the budget, and
a budget point of order would lie. At the Heritage Foundation, Mr. Robert Rector, who is the
expert who dealt with welfare, studied this. He was the
architect of welfare reform who has done so much to improve
America?s welfare system and improve incomes for low-
income families. It really worked beautifully. He was the
architect of it. He says this bill represents the greatest
increase in welfare in 35 years. With the provisions and
benefits that will be in it, he estimates that year 10 through
year 20, the cost could be $50 to $60 billion a year to the
taxpayers because it takes some time for the people who are
adjusting and becoming citizens and/or legal permanent
residents to really begin to make the claims. CBO admits the numbers are going to surge in the outyears.
He says it is $50 billion a year. If that is so?and he is not
exaggerating the numbers, because that is based solely on
the amnesty provisions, not the provisions that will allow 3
times to 4 times as many people to come into the country
legally in the next 20 years as come in today, and many of
them will go on welfare because that whole system is not
based on identifying people with skills and educational levels
that would indicate they would be more than low-wage
workers?so it could really be more than that. But $50 billion a
year over 10 years is $500 billion. That is a half a trillion
dollars, and that is why Mr. Rector said this legislation is a
fiscal catastrophe. This is a man whose opinions and ideas
and research this Congress, and particularly the Republicans,
utilized to hammer away, time and time again, year after year,
to get welfare reform. It finally happened. It worked just like he said. The predictions
of disaster made against his recommendations proved to be
false. He is saying that about this. So this is not a technical point of
order. It represents an attempt to save the fiscal soundness of
the budget of the United States. I want to take some moments here to deal with some
problems with the legislation. The American people are
suspicious of us. They were promised in 1986, after years of
urging the Government, the President and the Congress,
promised to fix our borders and end illegal immigration. In
exchange for that they acquiesced and went along with
amnesty in 1986. They said there were a million, 2 million
here who would claim it. It turned out 3 million claimed
amnesty after 1986. That ought to give us some pause about
the projections that we would have. We have 11 million people
here now and only 8 or so will seek amnesty under it. That
ought to give us some pause there. It may well be above the
number. So the American people are suspicious and they are dubious
and they are watching us carefully, and they should. Let me
tell you some of the things that are in the legislation that
indicate a lack of respect for the American people, really.
Some of these are some of the reasons I said the other day the
Senate should be ashamed of itself, the way we are moving
this bill. My staff, working up some of these comments, came up with
a title?maybe at my suggestion??Sneaky Lawyer Tricks? that
are in the bill. I will let you decide if that is a fair description
of what is in it. I will go down through some of the matters
that are important. There are others I could complain about
for which we will not have time. First, the legislation talks about title IV of the bill. That title IV
of the [*S5031] bill defines the new H2-C program as a temporary guest
worker program. Those are in big print in the bill: Temporary
guest workers. That sounds like a temporary worker, doesn?t it? It sounds
like a guest, like somebody who stays in your bedroom for a
weekend, a guest, temporary guest. Interesting, section 408 sets out the temporary guest worker
visa program task force. So a little further down it has what is
called a temporary guest worker visa program task force. So
you would think they are writing in this section, would you
not, something about the task force. But this, down in that
section, this task force establishes the number of H2C visas
that may be issued annually and subsection (h) is where the
writers of the bill hid the provision that actually transforms
these so-called temporary workers into legal, permanent
residents. OK? So all the big print, ?temporary guest workers,?
?temporary guest worker task force,? and then you read in
that section down there that it effectively converts them from
temporary workers to legal permanent residents, granting
them a green card. It is tucked away in a title that has nothing to do with
substance of that matter. So I am pleased that my staff and
others who have been reading the bill have discovered that. It
wasn?t discovered early on in the process. Family members of H-2C visa holder need not be healthy.
Under current law, aliens must prove that they are admissible
and meet certain health standards. Many times, visa
applicants must have a medical exam to show that they do not
have a communicable disease. They have to be up-to-date on
immunizations, and cannot have mental disorders. Spouses
and children of H-2C visa holders, however, are not required
to have a medical exam before receiving a visa. I have an
amendment to fix this that I hope is accepted. The work requirement for a blue card can be satisfied in a
matter of hours. Under the AgJOBS component of the
substitute, illegal alien agricultural workers who have worked
150 ?workdays? in agriculture over the last 2 years will receive
a ?blue card,? allowing them to live and work permanently in
the U.S. However, because current law defines an agricultural
?workday? as 1 hour of work per day?the bill language
restates that definition on page 397?an alien who has worked
for as little as 150 hours?there are 168 hours in a week?in
agriculture over the last 2 years will qualify for a blue card. Blue card aliens can only be fired for just cause, unlike an
American citizen worker who is likely under an employment at
will agreement with the agricultural employer. No alien granted blue card status may be terminated from
employment by any employer during the period of blue card
status except for just cause. Because blue card aliens are not limited to working in
agriculture, this employment requirement will follow the alien
at their second and third jobs as well. The bill goes as far as
setting up an arbitration process for blue card aliens who
allege they have been terminated without just cause.
Furthermore, the bill requires the Secretary of Homeland
Security to pay the fee and expenses of the arbitrator.
American citizens do not have a right to this arbitration
process, why are we setting up an arbitration process for blue
card aliens paid for by the American taxpayer. Regarding free legal counsel, the AgJOBS amendment goes
further than paying for arbitrators, it also provides free legal
counsel to illegal aliens who want to receive this amnesty. The
AgJOBS amendment specifically states that recipients of
?funds under the Legal Services Corporation Act? shall not be
prevented ?from providing legal assistance directly related to
an application for adjustment of status under this section.?
Interestingly, page 414 of the bill requires the alien to have an
attorney file the application for him. Not only will AgJOBS give
amnesty to 1.5 million illegal aliens, it would have the
American taxpayer pay the legal bills of those illegal aliens.
This is unbelievable and unacceptable. We should not be
rewarding illegal aliens who break our laws with free legal
counsel and a direct path to citizenship. Under this bill a temporary worker is eligible for a green card
if they, in part, maintained their H-2C status. In order to
maintain this status the ?temporary? worker may not be
unemployed for a period of 60 continuous days. This means
that a temporary worker only has to work 1 day in every 59
days to maintain status. This employment requirement only
requires that they work about 1 day every 2 months. In this bill, an alien who has been here between 2 and 5 years
is not eligible for asylum if they have persecuted others on
account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a
particular social group, or political opinion. However, an alien
here more than 5 years who has persecuted others on account
of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social
group, or political opinion gets amnesty under this bill. There
is no specific ineligibility for such conduct. Since it is included
under the ?mandatory deferred departure? section, a court will
interpret this to mean we purposefully left it out of the
?earned amnesty.? I cannot imagine why the drafters of this
bill would allow persecutors to benefit from amnesty. The bill?s future flow ?guest worker? program in title IV leaves
no illegal alien behind?it is not limited to people outside the
United States who want to come here to work in the future,
but includes illegal aliens currently present in the United
States that do not qualify for the amnesty programs in title VI,
including aliens here for less than 2 years. Under the bill
language, you can qualify for the new H-2C program to work
as a low-skilled permanent immigrant, even if you are
unlawfully present inside the United States today. The bill
specifically says: In determining the alien?s admissibility as an H-2C
nonimmigrant . . . paragraphs (5), (6)(A), (7), (9)(B), and (9) (C)
of section 212(a) may be waived for conduct that occurred
before the effective date. . . . By waving these grounds of inadmissibility, the new H-2C
program is specifically intended to apply to illegal aliens who
were already removed from the United States and illegally
reentered. The bill tells DHS to accept ?just and reasonable inferences?
from day labor centers and the alien?s ?sworn declaration? as
evidence that the alien has met the amnesty?s work
requirement. Under the bill, the alien meets the ?burden of
proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the alien has
satisfied the [work] requirements? if the alien can demonstrate
employment ?as a matter of just and reasonable inference.?
An alien can present ?conclusive evidence? of employment in
the United States by presenting documents from social
security, IRS, employer, or a ?union or day labor center.? The
bill then states that: It is the intent of Congress that the [work] requirement . . . be
interpreted and implemented in a manner that recognizes and
takes into account the difficulties encountered by aliens in
obtaining evidence of employment due to the undocumented
status of the alien. If these lax standards can?t be met, the bill makes sure that
the alien can get what they need by allowing them to submit
?sworn declarations for each period of employment.? Putting
these together the alien must prove it is more likely than not
that there is a just and reasonable inference that the alien was
employed. I don?t know what this means other than DHS will
have to accept just about anything as proof of employment. Regarding in-State tuition for illegal aliens, current law
provides that: [A]n alien who is not lawfully present in the United States shall
not be eligible on the basis of residence within a State (or a
political subdivision) for any postsecondary education benefit
unless a citizen or national of the United States is eligible for
such a benefit (in no less an amount, duration, and scope)
without regard to whether the citizen or national is such a
resident. The DREAM Act would eliminate this provision and allow
illegal alien college and university students to be eligible for
in-state tuition without affording out-of-state citizen
students the same opportunity. Thus, the University of
Alabama could offer in-state tuition to illegal alien students
while requiring citizens residing in Mississippi to pay the
much higher out-of-state tuition rates. Allowing all illegal aliens enrolled in college to receive in-state
tuition rates means that while American citizens from 49
other states have to pay out-of-state tuition rates to send
their kids to [*S5032] UVA, people who have illegally
immigrated to this country might not. Out-of-state tuition
rates range from 2 to 3 ? times the in-state resident tuition
rate. Regarding Federal financial aid for illegal aliens, while the Pell
grants provision was removed from the bill, Stafford student
loans and work study remains in. Under title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as
amended, legal permanent residents and certain other eligible
non-citizens are eligible to compete with American citizens
for certain types of higher education assistance. The DREAM Act makes illegal aliens eligible for several types
of higher education assistance offered under the Higher
Education Act?including Stafford student loans and work study
programs. There is another matter, another sleight of hand I suggest. Amnesty both for legal aliens who have been here for more
than 5 years, and those in the next category who are here
from 2 to 5 years, don?t really require that those aliens have
to be continuously present in the United States. That is what it
says in plain language. It starts off that you have to be continuously present in the
United States. But, once again, is that what it really means? The bill allows these aliens to depart and to return after a
brief departure. This allows illegal aliens who broke our laws
by entering the United States and who have left and returned
illegally perhaps multiple times?and each time violating our
laws by entering the United States?to qualify for this amnesty. I am not sure how these departures and illegal entries can be
considered innocent since the illegal aliens broke U.S. laws by
reentering. But it will absolve them from any of these multiple
violations. That is a huge loophole. This is even more important. An alien may not have had deep
roots in our country. They may have spent a lot of their time
away from our country. But they heard about this amnesty,
and if they can get in the country, then they will say they have
been here continuously, perhaps. Somebody says: No. We found out you were back home. He says: That was brief. I want my amnesty. We object. I am going to take you to court, or you prove it, or
I say I have been here. That is what I say. It is going to be very
difficult to prove that. There are provisions in the bill that deal with U.S. worker
protections. The bill purports to protect U.S. workers from the
flood of cheap labor that might occur by requiring employers
to prove to the Department of Labor that good-faith efforts
have been taken, first, to recruit U.S. workers for a job before
they go out and hire someone from outside of our country.
They ought to at least find out if there are American workers
who want the job. Then they are supposed to notify the Secretary of Labor and
the Department of Homeland Security when one of these H-
2C workers is ?separated from employment.? I am quoting that??separated from employment? requires
notice. We heard defenders of the bill say: Well, if you are not
continuously working, they will notify the Department of
Labor and you have to leave the country. Have you heard that? You have to be continuously working,
you can?t be not working, or else you are not entitled to the
benefits of this H-2C provision. The separation from
employment notification is supposed to help the Department
of Labor and Homeland Security know which people have been
out of work, and if they are out of work under the bill for
more than 60 days, their visas are supposed to be revoked. OK. That is supposed to be a provision that makes sure
people who come here are really working. Sounds good. But
under the provisions of the bill, the term ?separation from
employment??you can find that on page 236. As defined, the
term means virtually zero. As defined, ?separation from employment is anything other
than discharged for inadequate performance, violation of
workplace rules, cause, voluntary departure, voluntary
retirement, or expiration of a grant or contract.? Furthermore, it does not include those situations where the
worker is offered?even if they do not take it?another position
by the same employer. Is that what I just read to you? It is hard to believe?that you
are supposed to notify them, except you don?t need to notify
them if they have left work, if they left work because they
were discharged for inadequate performance, fired, or
violation of workplace rules, or for just cause, or involuntary
departure, involuntary retirement, or expiration of the
contract. You don?t have to notify them about those things. What would you notify them for, pray tell? That is ?flabber?
written. I submit whoever wrote this bil l?it was not the
Senators, I can assure you of that? ought to be ashamed of
themselves. That was a deliberate evisceration of what on the surface
sounds like a legitimate provision, totally unenforceable.
There is no way under this provision DHS or the Department
of Labor will be provided information about people who have
been terminated from employment. Protections for U.S. workers?that is one of the goals the bill
says it reaches. Under the bill, employers must prove that
hiring an H-2C worker will not adversely affect the wages and
working conditions of workers in the United States, and that
they did not and will not cause separation from employment
of a U.S. worker employed by an employer within the 180-day
period beginning 90 days before this H-2C petition is filed. Employers must also prove that they made good-faith efforts
to recruit U.S. workers before they can hire an H-2C worker.
That sounds good but, once again, things are not what they
seem. As defined on page 263 of the bill, a U.S. worker includes not
only citizens, it includes legal alien workers. And, amazingly,
it also includes aliens who are ?otherwise authorized under
this act to be employed in the United States.? In other words, this provision provides protection for those
who have been given legal status under amnesty, over and
above, and provides them the same protection we provide to
American citizens who are supposed to be given some
protection against the flood of foreign labor. You have heard the deal. You have heard it said that the
people who come to get amnesty?this is almost
humorous?have got to pay their taxes. That is part of some
sort of punishment. They make it sound like, in some way,
you earned the right to be forgiven of your crime by paying
your taxes. Everybody is supposed to pay their taxes. For heaven?s sake,
we are all supposed to pay taxes. This is nothing but doing
what you would expect any American to do. But under the bill,
things are, once again, not quite what their sponsors have
said, or what the language might lead you to believe. You
have to read it carefully. Under the bill, an illegal alien who is getting amnesty only has
to pay back taxes for the period of employment required in
the INA, section 245(B)(A)(1)(d). This is on page 347 of the bill, if people would like to look.
These are actually just 3 of the 5 years between April 5, 2001,
and April 5, 2002. So the plain language of the bill doesn?t require them to pay
all their back taxes at all. They get an option to pick and
choose which 3 years they want to pay their taxes.
Presumably, they can forget and not pay the taxes for the high
years. How silly is that? This is really important. I think most Americans are pretty
sophisticated. They know how the system works and the
massive numbers we are talking about?the burden of proving
payment of back taxes is on the Internal Revenue Service,
pages 351 and 411. They have to prove it. How are they going
to prove it? The IRS must prove that they owe the taxes. How
will the IRS know if an illegal alien has worked off the books
thereby avoiding paying any taxes? This is really an utter joke. It is a promotion put forth by those
in support of the bill that I have heard repeatedly?that
somehow it is supposed to make us believe that people have
earned their right to be forgiven for violating the law, and
they only have to pay back 3 of the last 5 years in taxes. What about American citizens? Do you think you can go down
to Uncle [*S5033] Sam, Mr. President, and have 5 years of income and then be
able to pick and choose which years you pay and you only pay
3 out of your last 5 years? Why don?t we let every American
citizen have this benefit? Why do we only give it to people who
entered the country illegally? You tell me. What about background checks? The bill requires the
Department of Homeland Security to do them on illegal aliens.
That is going to be exceedingly difficult. They are required to
do it within 90 days. They have to protect our homeland. They
have to handle all these provisions. I don?t think it can ever be
done. That may sound like something important is going to
happen, that all the people here illegally will have their
backgrounds checked promptly, but the truth is that is not
going to get done in that timeframe. How about fines? Let me state who they want to fine. A
Federal agent, trying to do his duty to enforce the law and
investigate fraudulent information provided by an illegal alien
in their amnesty application, for law enforcement purposes,
what happens to them if they take the amnesty application
and actually examine it and find out it is fraudulent? What do
they do? The agent would be fined $10,000. That fine, I note,
is five times the amount the alien is able to post, $2,000, to
get his amnesty from his illegal acts. There is no reason in the world Federal law enforcement
officers should be barred from investigating and utilizing
amnesty applications to prosecute criminal activities in
America. There is no reason this ought to be protected other
than it looks to me that some clever lawyer has realized if
they can get this in the bill people can file false amnesty
applications all day and no one will ever be able to
investigate. Isn?t that horrible? That is what it looks like to
me. Is that a sneaky lawyer trick? I ask you to make that
judgment. It does not sound good to me. Page 363 of the bill. Look it up. How about the employers? They get tax amnesty. Employers
of aliens applying for adjustment of status?amnesty??shall not
be subject to civil and criminal tax liability relating directly to
the employment of such an alien.? That means a business that
hired illegal workers does not have to pay the taxes they
should have paid. Why? This encourages employers to violate
our tax laws and not pay what they owe the Federal
Government. They are excusing these employers and giving
them amnesty from not withholding taxes. That is a very bad
thing. Every American business knows they have to pay their
withholding taxes. What about two small businesses, one hiring illegal aliens not
paying Social Security, not paying withholding to the
Government, and paying some low wage, and another one
across the street doing all the right things, hiring American
citizens, perhaps paying higher wages and withholding money
and sending his Social Security money to the Federal
Government, what message does that send to the good guy,
to give complete amnesty to the guy who has manipulated the
system and gotten away perhaps with tens of thousands of
dollars in benefits that his competitor did not get? You cannot play games with the law like this. You cannot pick
and choose people and allow them unilaterally to not have to
pay their taxes. What about illegal alien protection? The alien and their
families who file applications for amnesty ?shall not be
detained, determined inadmissible, deported, or removed
until their applications are finally adjudicated, unless they
commit a future act that renders them ineligible with
amnesty.? With tens of millions of applications, this amnesty,
this provision essentially guarantees an illegal alien years of
protection in the United States, even if they do not qualify for
the amnesty. We hear they have to pay the fine, the $2,000 fine, but it is
not due right away . For those in the amnesty program, illegal
aliens are supposed to pay a fine of $2,000. However, the way
the bill is written, many illegal aliens may not have to pay the
fine for 8 years. The bill says that the $2,000 fine has to be
paid ?prior to adjudication.? It is not required at the first. If it
is left the way it is, the illegal alien can live, work and play in
our country and not pay a cent of his fine for years. Perhaps
they may even decide they do not want to pay it at all. This
puts a financial burden on local taxpayers for the health,
education, and the infrastructure costs that are not
reimbursed for about 5 or 10 years. There are a number of other items. However, it is late; I will
make these remarks part of the Record and will not belabor
these points. It is clear the people who drafted this legislation had an
agenda and the agenda was not to meet the expectations of
the American people. The agenda was to create a facade and
appearance of enforcement, an appearance of toughness in
some instances. When you get into the meat of the provisions
and get into the bill and study it, tucked away here and there
are laws that eviscerate and eliminate the real effectiveness of
those provisions. It was carefully done and deliberately done.
This is a bill that should not become law. It is a bill that will
come back to be an embarrassment to our Members who have
supported it. I wish it were not so. I know how these things
happen. You do not always have time to do everything you
want to do. You try to do something you think is right, but
ultimately in a bill as important as this one that has
tremendous impact on the future of our country and our legal
system and our commitment to the rule of law, we ought to
get it right. We ought not to let this one slide by. It is not
acceptable to say, let?s just pass something and we will send
it to the House and maybe the House of Representatives will
stand up and stop it and fix it. That is not acceptable for the
great Senate of the United States. I strongly believe we are not ready to pass the bill. We are not
ready to give it final consideration. I strongly believe it is a
horrendous violation of the Committee on the Budget and that
it is, as Mr. Rector said, a fiscal catastrophe if passed, and as
such we ought not to waive the Budget Act but pull the bill
from the floor and fix it. I yield the floor. Copyright ? 2006 HUMAN EVENTS. All Rights Reserved.
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
Do read this carefully.
Immigration Bill Is Worse Than You Think by Sen. Jeff Sessions
Posted May 25, 2006 Editor?s Note: Sen. Jeff Sessions (R.-Ala.), a member of the
Senate Judiciary Committee, offered a devastating analysis on
the Senate immigration bill in a speech delivered on the
Senate floor on Tuesday, May 23. Sessions pointed to
shocking elements of the bill that were hidden deep in its
text. These include, for example, that the employers of illegal
aliens would be given an amnesty for cheating on their taxes,
and that under the terms of the law the government would for
all practical purposes have to take an illegal alien?s word for it
that he has been in the country illegally long enough to
qualify for an amnesty. Sessions also pointed to some of the tremendous hidden
costs of the bill, including the $500 billion in additional
welfare payments it will cost American taxpayers in the period
10 to 20 years after its passage. Senators who vote for the bill today cannot credibly claim later
they were unaware of the elements and consequences that
Sen. Session?s outlined in this speech.
I am going to take some time tonight to inform my colleagues
about some of the problems with the legislation before us. It
is worse than you think, colleagues. The legislation has an incredible number of problems with it.
Some, as I will point out tonight, can only be considered
deliberate. Whereas on the one hand it has nice words with
good sounding phrases in it to do good things, on the second
hand it completely eviscerates that, oftentimes in a way that
only the most careful reading by a good lawyer would
discover. So I feel like I have to fulfill my duty. I was on the
Judiciary Committee. We went into this. We tried to monitor it
and study it and actually read this 614-page bill, and I have a
responsibility and I am going to fulfill my responsibility. I think the things I am saying tonight ought to disturb people.
They ought to be unhappy about it. It ought to make them
consider whether they want to vote for this piece of legislation
that, in my opinion, should never, ever become law. I would also just point out I will be offering tomorrow, or
soon, an amendment to deal with the earned-income tax
credit situation that is raised by this legislation, focusing on
the amnesty in the bill and what will happen after amnesty is
granted, before they become a full citizen. The Congressional
Budget Office has concluded that the earned-income tax
credit will pay out to those who came into our country illegally
$29 billion over 10 years. The earned-income tax credit has
been on the books for some time. It is a good bit larger than
most people think. The average recipient of it receives
$1,700. Lower-income people get a larger amount. Over half
the people who we expect will receive amnesty are without a
high school degree. They are receiving lower wages. They will
be the ones who will particularly qualify for this. This is a
score that has been given to us by the group that is supposed
to score it?$29 billion will be paid out. If they go all the way and become a citizen they will be
entitled to this like any other citizen, and they will be entitled
to get it under my amendment. But I do not believe we should
award people who have entered our country illegally,
submitted a false Social Security number, worked illegally?I do
not believe we should reward them with $29 billion of the
taxpayers? money. That is a lot of money. I will also be offering a budget point of order, I or one of my
colleagues will, in the next day or so. We have been working
on that. We asked for a report. The Congressional Budget
Office has concluded that the budget point of order lies in the
first 10 years of this bill. It also concludes that it lies under
the long-term provisions of the budget points of order for
expenditures in the outyears. They didn?t give us those
numbers, but they said, without much work?they didn?t have
to do much work?the numbers are going to be much worse in
the outyears. It clearly would be a detriment to the
Government and these figures would exceed the budget, and
a budget point of order would lie. At the Heritage Foundation, Mr. Robert Rector, who is the
expert who dealt with welfare, studied this. He was the
architect of welfare reform who has done so much to improve
America?s welfare system and improve incomes for low-
income families. It really worked beautifully. He was the
architect of it. He says this bill represents the greatest
increase in welfare in 35 years. With the provisions and
benefits that will be in it, he estimates that year 10 through
year 20, the cost could be $50 to $60 billion a year to the
taxpayers because it takes some time for the people who are
adjusting and becoming citizens and/or legal permanent
residents to really begin to make the claims. CBO admits the numbers are going to surge in the outyears.
He says it is $50 billion a year. If that is so?and he is not
exaggerating the numbers, because that is based solely on
the amnesty provisions, not the provisions that will allow 3
times to 4 times as many people to come into the country
legally in the next 20 years as come in today, and many of
them will go on welfare because that whole system is not
based on identifying people with skills and educational levels
that would indicate they would be more than low-wage
workers?so it could really be more than that. But $50 billion a
year over 10 years is $500 billion. That is a half a trillion
dollars, and that is why Mr. Rector said this legislation is a
fiscal catastrophe. This is a man whose opinions and ideas
and research this Congress, and particularly the Republicans,
utilized to hammer away, time and time again, year after year,
to get welfare reform. It finally happened. It worked just like he said. The predictions
of disaster made against his recommendations proved to be
false. He is saying that about this. So this is not a technical point of
order. It represents an attempt to save the fiscal soundness of
the budget of the United States. I want to take some moments here to deal with some
problems with the legislation. The American people are
suspicious of us. They were promised in 1986, after years of
urging the Government, the President and the Congress,
promised to fix our borders and end illegal immigration. In
exchange for that they acquiesced and went along with
amnesty in 1986. They said there were a million, 2 million
here who would claim it. It turned out 3 million claimed
amnesty after 1986. That ought to give us some pause about
the projections that we would have. We have 11 million people
here now and only 8 or so will seek amnesty under it. That
ought to give us some pause there. It may well be above the
number. So the American people are suspicious and they are dubious
and they are watching us carefully, and they should. Let me
tell you some of the things that are in the legislation that
indicate a lack of respect for the American people, really.
Some of these are some of the reasons I said the other day the
Senate should be ashamed of itself, the way we are moving
this bill. My staff, working up some of these comments, came up with
a title?maybe at my suggestion??Sneaky Lawyer Tricks? that
are in the bill. I will let you decide if that is a fair description
of what is in it. I will go down through some of the matters
that are important. There are others I could complain about
for which we will not have time. First, the legislation talks about title IV of the bill. That title IV
of the [*S5031] bill defines the new H2-C program as a temporary guest
worker program. Those are in big print in the bill: Temporary
guest workers. That sounds like a temporary worker, doesn?t it? It sounds
like a guest, like somebody who stays in your bedroom for a
weekend, a guest, temporary guest. Interesting, section 408 sets out the temporary guest worker
visa program task force. So a little further down it has what is
called a temporary guest worker visa program task force. So
you would think they are writing in this section, would you
not, something about the task force. But this, down in that
section, this task force establishes the number of H2C visas
that may be issued annually and subsection (h) is where the
writers of the bill hid the provision that actually transforms
these so-called temporary workers into legal, permanent
residents. OK? So all the big print, ?temporary guest workers,?
?temporary guest worker task force,? and then you read in
that section down there that it effectively converts them from
temporary workers to legal permanent residents, granting
them a green card. It is tucked away in a title that has nothing to do with
substance of that matter. So I am pleased that my staff and
others who have been reading the bill have discovered that. It
wasn?t discovered early on in the process. Family members of H-2C visa holder need not be healthy.
Under current law, aliens must prove that they are admissible
and meet certain health standards. Many times, visa
applicants must have a medical exam to show that they do not
have a communicable disease. They have to be up-to-date on
immunizations, and cannot have mental disorders. Spouses
and children of H-2C visa holders, however, are not required
to have a medical exam before receiving a visa. I have an
amendment to fix this that I hope is accepted. The work requirement for a blue card can be satisfied in a
matter of hours. Under the AgJOBS component of the
substitute, illegal alien agricultural workers who have worked
150 ?workdays? in agriculture over the last 2 years will receive
a ?blue card,? allowing them to live and work permanently in
the U.S. However, because current law defines an agricultural
?workday? as 1 hour of work per day?the bill language
restates that definition on page 397?an alien who has worked
for as little as 150 hours?there are 168 hours in a week?in
agriculture over the last 2 years will qualify for a blue card. Blue card aliens can only be fired for just cause, unlike an
American citizen worker who is likely under an employment at
will agreement with the agricultural employer. No alien granted blue card status may be terminated from
employment by any employer during the period of blue card
status except for just cause. Because blue card aliens are not limited to working in
agriculture, this employment requirement will follow the alien
at their second and third jobs as well. The bill goes as far as
setting up an arbitration process for blue card aliens who
allege they have been terminated without just cause.
Furthermore, the bill requires the Secretary of Homeland
Security to pay the fee and expenses of the arbitrator.
American citizens do not have a right to this arbitration
process, why are we setting up an arbitration process for blue
card aliens paid for by the American taxpayer. Regarding free legal counsel, the AgJOBS amendment goes
further than paying for arbitrators, it also provides free legal
counsel to illegal aliens who want to receive this amnesty. The
AgJOBS amendment specifically states that recipients of
?funds under the Legal Services Corporation Act? shall not be
prevented ?from providing legal assistance directly related to
an application for adjustment of status under this section.?
Interestingly, page 414 of the bill requires the alien to have an
attorney file the application for him. Not only will AgJOBS give
amnesty to 1.5 million illegal aliens, it would have the
American taxpayer pay the legal bills of those illegal aliens.
This is unbelievable and unacceptable. We should not be
rewarding illegal aliens who break our laws with free legal
counsel and a direct path to citizenship. Under this bill a temporary worker is eligible for a green card
if they, in part, maintained their H-2C status. In order to
maintain this status the ?temporary? worker may not be
unemployed for a period of 60 continuous days. This means
that a temporary worker only has to work 1 day in every 59
days to maintain status. This employment requirement only
requires that they work about 1 day every 2 months. In this bill, an alien who has been here between 2 and 5 years
is not eligible for asylum if they have persecuted others on
account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a
particular social group, or political opinion. However, an alien
here more than 5 years who has persecuted others on account
of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social
group, or political opinion gets amnesty under this bill. There
is no specific ineligibility for such conduct. Since it is included
under the ?mandatory deferred departure? section, a court will
interpret this to mean we purposefully left it out of the
?earned amnesty.? I cannot imagine why the drafters of this
bill would allow persecutors to benefit from amnesty. The bill?s future flow ?guest worker? program in title IV leaves
no illegal alien behind?it is not limited to people outside the
United States who want to come here to work in the future,
but includes illegal aliens currently present in the United
States that do not qualify for the amnesty programs in title VI,
including aliens here for less than 2 years. Under the bill
language, you can qualify for the new H-2C program to work
as a low-skilled permanent immigrant, even if you are
unlawfully present inside the United States today. The bill
specifically says: In determining the alien?s admissibility as an H-2C
nonimmigrant . . . paragraphs (5), (6)(A), (7), (9)(B), and (9) (C)
of section 212(a) may be waived for conduct that occurred
before the effective date. . . . By waving these grounds of inadmissibility, the new H-2C
program is specifically intended to apply to illegal aliens who
were already removed from the United States and illegally
reentered. The bill tells DHS to accept ?just and reasonable inferences?
from day labor centers and the alien?s ?sworn declaration? as
evidence that the alien has met the amnesty?s work
requirement. Under the bill, the alien meets the ?burden of
proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the alien has
satisfied the [work] requirements? if the alien can demonstrate
employment ?as a matter of just and reasonable inference.?
An alien can present ?conclusive evidence? of employment in
the United States by presenting documents from social
security, IRS, employer, or a ?union or day labor center.? The
bill then states that: It is the intent of Congress that the [work] requirement . . . be
interpreted and implemented in a manner that recognizes and
takes into account the difficulties encountered by aliens in
obtaining evidence of employment due to the undocumented
status of the alien. If these lax standards can?t be met, the bill makes sure that
the alien can get what they need by allowing them to submit
?sworn declarations for each period of employment.? Putting
these together the alien must prove it is more likely than not
that there is a just and reasonable inference that the alien was
employed. I don?t know what this means other than DHS will
have to accept just about anything as proof of employment. Regarding in-State tuition for illegal aliens, current law
provides that: [A]n alien who is not lawfully present in the United States shall
not be eligible on the basis of residence within a State (or a
political subdivision) for any postsecondary education benefit
unless a citizen or national of the United States is eligible for
such a benefit (in no less an amount, duration, and scope)
without regard to whether the citizen or national is such a
resident. The DREAM Act would eliminate this provision and allow
illegal alien college and university students to be eligible for
in-state tuition without affording out-of-state citizen
students the same opportunity. Thus, the University of
Alabama could offer in-state tuition to illegal alien students
while requiring citizens residing in Mississippi to pay the
much higher out-of-state tuition rates. Allowing all illegal aliens enrolled in college to receive in-state
tuition rates means that while American citizens from 49
other states have to pay out-of-state tuition rates to send
their kids to [*S5032] UVA, people who have illegally
immigrated to this country might not. Out-of-state tuition
rates range from 2 to 3 ? times the in-state resident tuition
rate. Regarding Federal financial aid for illegal aliens, while the Pell
grants provision was removed from the bill, Stafford student
loans and work study remains in. Under title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as
amended, legal permanent residents and certain other eligible
non-citizens are eligible to compete with American citizens
for certain types of higher education assistance. The DREAM Act makes illegal aliens eligible for several types
of higher education assistance offered under the Higher
Education Act?including Stafford student loans and work study
programs. There is another matter, another sleight of hand I suggest. Amnesty both for legal aliens who have been here for more
than 5 years, and those in the next category who are here
from 2 to 5 years, don?t really require that those aliens have
to be continuously present in the United States. That is what it
says in plain language. It starts off that you have to be continuously present in the
United States. But, once again, is that what it really means? The bill allows these aliens to depart and to return after a
brief departure. This allows illegal aliens who broke our laws
by entering the United States and who have left and returned
illegally perhaps multiple times?and each time violating our
laws by entering the United States?to qualify for this amnesty. I am not sure how these departures and illegal entries can be
considered innocent since the illegal aliens broke U.S. laws by
reentering. But it will absolve them from any of these multiple
violations. That is a huge loophole. This is even more important. An alien may not have had deep
roots in our country. They may have spent a lot of their time
away from our country. But they heard about this amnesty,
and if they can get in the country, then they will say they have
been here continuously, perhaps. Somebody says: No. We found out you were back home. He says: That was brief. I want my amnesty. We object. I am going to take you to court, or you prove it, or
I say I have been here. That is what I say. It is going to be very
difficult to prove that. There are provisions in the bill that deal with U.S. worker
protections. The bill purports to protect U.S. workers from the
flood of cheap labor that might occur by requiring employers
to prove to the Department of Labor that good-faith efforts
have been taken, first, to recruit U.S. workers for a job before
they go out and hire someone from outside of our country.
They ought to at least find out if there are American workers
who want the job. Then they are supposed to notify the Secretary of Labor and
the Department of Homeland Security when one of these H-
2C workers is ?separated from employment.? I am quoting that??separated from employment? requires
notice. We heard defenders of the bill say: Well, if you are not
continuously working, they will notify the Department of
Labor and you have to leave the country. Have you heard that? You have to be continuously working,
you can?t be not working, or else you are not entitled to the
benefits of this H-2C provision. The separation from
employment notification is supposed to help the Department
of Labor and Homeland Security know which people have been
out of work, and if they are out of work under the bill for
more than 60 days, their visas are supposed to be revoked. OK. That is supposed to be a provision that makes sure
people who come here are really working. Sounds good. But
under the provisions of the bill, the term ?separation from
employment??you can find that on page 236. As defined, the
term means virtually zero. As defined, ?separation from employment is anything other
than discharged for inadequate performance, violation of
workplace rules, cause, voluntary departure, voluntary
retirement, or expiration of a grant or contract.? Furthermore, it does not include those situations where the
worker is offered?even if they do not take it?another position
by the same employer. Is that what I just read to you? It is hard to believe?that you
are supposed to notify them, except you don?t need to notify
them if they have left work, if they left work because they
were discharged for inadequate performance, fired, or
violation of workplace rules, or for just cause, or involuntary
departure, involuntary retirement, or expiration of the
contract. You don?t have to notify them about those things. What would you notify them for, pray tell? That is ?flabber?
written. I submit whoever wrote this bil l?it was not the
Senators, I can assure you of that? ought to be ashamed of
themselves. That was a deliberate evisceration of what on the surface
sounds like a legitimate provision, totally unenforceable.
There is no way under this provision DHS or the Department
of Labor will be provided information about people who have
been terminated from employment. Protections for U.S. workers?that is one of the goals the bill
says it reaches. Under the bill, employers must prove that
hiring an H-2C worker will not adversely affect the wages and
working conditions of workers in the United States, and that
they did not and will not cause separation from employment
of a U.S. worker employed by an employer within the 180-day
period beginning 90 days before this H-2C petition is filed. Employers must also prove that they made good-faith efforts
to recruit U.S. workers before they can hire an H-2C worker.
That sounds good but, once again, things are not what they
seem. As defined on page 263 of the bill, a U.S. worker includes not
only citizens, it includes legal alien workers. And, amazingly,
it also includes aliens who are ?otherwise authorized under
this act to be employed in the United States.? In other words, this provision provides protection for those
who have been given legal status under amnesty, over and
above, and provides them the same protection we provide to
American citizens who are supposed to be given some
protection against the flood of foreign labor. You have heard the deal. You have heard it said that the
people who come to get amnesty?this is almost
humorous?have got to pay their taxes. That is part of some
sort of punishment. They make it sound like, in some way,
you earned the right to be forgiven of your crime by paying
your taxes. Everybody is supposed to pay their taxes. For heaven?s sake,
we are all supposed to pay taxes. This is nothing but doing
what you would expect any American to do. But under the bill,
things are, once again, not quite what their sponsors have
said, or what the language might lead you to believe. You
have to read it carefully. Under the bill, an illegal alien who is getting amnesty only has
to pay back taxes for the period of employment required in
the INA, section 245(B)(A)(1)(d). This is on page 347 of the bill, if people would like to look.
These are actually just 3 of the 5 years between April 5, 2001,
and April 5, 2002. So the plain language of the bill doesn?t require them to pay
all their back taxes at all. They get an option to pick and
choose which 3 years they want to pay their taxes.
Presumably, they can forget and not pay the taxes for the high
years. How silly is that? This is really important. I think most Americans are pretty
sophisticated. They know how the system works and the
massive numbers we are talking about?the burden of proving
payment of back taxes is on the Internal Revenue Service,
pages 351 and 411. They have to prove it. How are they going
to prove it? The IRS must prove that they owe the taxes. How
will the IRS know if an illegal alien has worked off the books
thereby avoiding paying any taxes? This is really an utter joke. It is a promotion put forth by those
in support of the bill that I have heard repeatedly?that
somehow it is supposed to make us believe that people have
earned their right to be forgiven for violating the law, and
they only have to pay back 3 of the last 5 years in taxes. What about American citizens? Do you think you can go down
to Uncle [*S5033] Sam, Mr. President, and have 5 years of income and then be
able to pick and choose which years you pay and you only pay
3 out of your last 5 years? Why don?t we let every American
citizen have this benefit? Why do we only give it to people who
entered the country illegally? You tell me. What about background checks? The bill requires the
Department of Homeland Security to do them on illegal aliens.
That is going to be exceedingly difficult. They are required to
do it within 90 days. They have to protect our homeland. They
have to handle all these provisions. I don?t think it can ever be
done. That may sound like something important is going to
happen, that all the people here illegally will have their
backgrounds checked promptly, but the truth is that is not
going to get done in that timeframe. How about fines? Let me state who they want to fine. A
Federal agent, trying to do his duty to enforce the law and
investigate fraudulent information provided by an illegal alien
in their amnesty application, for law enforcement purposes,
what happens to them if they take the amnesty application
and actually examine it and find out it is fraudulent? What do
they do? The agent would be fined $10,000. That fine, I note,
is five times the amount the alien is able to post, $2,000, to
get his amnesty from his illegal acts. There is no reason in the world Federal law enforcement
officers should be barred from investigating and utilizing
amnesty applications to prosecute criminal activities in
America. There is no reason this ought to be protected other
than it looks to me that some clever lawyer has realized if
they can get this in the bill people can file false amnesty
applications all day and no one will ever be able to
investigate. Isn?t that horrible? That is what it looks like to
me. Is that a sneaky lawyer trick? I ask you to make that
judgment. It does not sound good to me. Page 363 of the bill. Look it up. How about the employers? They get tax amnesty. Employers
of aliens applying for adjustment of status?amnesty??shall not
be subject to civil and criminal tax liability relating directly to
the employment of such an alien.? That means a business that
hired illegal workers does not have to pay the taxes they
should have paid. Why? This encourages employers to violate
our tax laws and not pay what they owe the Federal
Government. They are excusing these employers and giving
them amnesty from not withholding taxes. That is a very bad
thing. Every American business knows they have to pay their
withholding taxes. What about two small businesses, one hiring illegal aliens not
paying Social Security, not paying withholding to the
Government, and paying some low wage, and another one
across the street doing all the right things, hiring American
citizens, perhaps paying higher wages and withholding money
and sending his Social Security money to the Federal
Government, what message does that send to the good guy,
to give complete amnesty to the guy who has manipulated the
system and gotten away perhaps with tens of thousands of
dollars in benefits that his competitor did not get? You cannot play games with the law like this. You cannot pick
and choose people and allow them unilaterally to not have to
pay their taxes. What about illegal alien protection? The alien and their
families who file applications for amnesty ?shall not be
detained, determined inadmissible, deported, or removed
until their applications are finally adjudicated, unless they
commit a future act that renders them ineligible with
amnesty.? With tens of millions of applications, this amnesty,
this provision essentially guarantees an illegal alien years of
protection in the United States, even if they do not qualify for
the amnesty. We hear they have to pay the fine, the $2,000 fine, but it is
not due right away . For those in the amnesty program, illegal
aliens are supposed to pay a fine of $2,000. However, the way
the bill is written, many illegal aliens may not have to pay the
fine for 8 years. The bill says that the $2,000 fine has to be
paid ?prior to adjudication.? It is not required at the first. If it
is left the way it is, the illegal alien can live, work and play in
our country and not pay a cent of his fine for years. Perhaps
they may even decide they do not want to pay it at all. This
puts a financial burden on local taxpayers for the health,
education, and the infrastructure costs that are not
reimbursed for about 5 or 10 years. There are a number of other items. However, it is late; I will
make these remarks part of the Record and will not belabor
these points. It is clear the people who drafted this legislation had an
agenda and the agenda was not to meet the expectations of
the American people. The agenda was to create a facade and
appearance of enforcement, an appearance of toughness in
some instances. When you get into the meat of the provisions
and get into the bill and study it, tucked away here and there
are laws that eviscerate and eliminate the real effectiveness of
those provisions. It was carefully done and deliberately done.
This is a bill that should not become law. It is a bill that will
come back to be an embarrassment to our Members who have
supported it. I wish it were not so. I know how these things
happen. You do not always have time to do everything you
want to do. You try to do something you think is right, but
ultimately in a bill as important as this one that has
tremendous impact on the future of our country and our legal
system and our commitment to the rule of law, we ought to
get it right. We ought not to let this one slide by. It is not
acceptable to say, let?s just pass something and we will send
it to the House and maybe the House of Representatives will
stand up and stop it and fix it. That is not acceptable for the
great Senate of the United States. I strongly believe we are not ready to pass the bill. We are not
ready to give it final consideration. I strongly believe it is a
horrendous violation of the Committee on the Budget and that
it is, as Mr. Rector said, a fiscal catastrophe if passed, and as
such we ought not to waive the Budget Act but pull the bill
from the floor and fix it. I yield the floor. Copyright ? 2006 HUMAN EVENTS. All Rights Reserved.
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“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
