The plan proposed by the 'Gang of Eight' fails on every major front.
The
so-called Gang of Eight immigration plan now being considered by the Senate
fails to live up to every major promise made by its sponsors. Far from
improving the immigration system, their 1,000-page proposal would exacerbate
many of its flaws. It would dangerously undermine future enforcement while
imposing substantial burdens on taxpayers and taking jobs and pay from U.S. workers.
Indeed, the
two unions representing our nation's immigration and customs officers and those
who process immigration applications have strongly urged opposition.
The
sponsors' promise of enforcement first was broken when lead sponsor Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) declared: "First, people
will be legalized.... Then we'll make sure the border is secure." About 11
million immigrants who are here illegally — which includes 4 million who have
overstayed their visas — would receive work permits, Social Security numbers
and access to state and local benefits within six months of passage. The Department of Homeland Securitymerely
has to submit a border plan, not accomplish that plan. Those legalized will
then be free to compete for jobs at a time of low wages and high unemployment.
It's amnesty first, not enforcement first.
Moreover,
the bill allows the DHS or an immigration judge to stop any future deportation
for humanitarian reasons, the public interest or family unity. Such open-ended
waivers would all but ensure mass litigation and the end of immigration
enforcement in America .
The sponsors
promised that back taxes would have to be paid, but under the bill, if the IRS doesn't audit someone working off the
books — which it isn't required to do — there will be no taxes to pay. There is
no requirement that immigrants pay state or local back taxes or that employers
pay back taxes.
The sponsors
promised that people here illegally would have to learn English and civics, but
the fine print reveals it will be at least 10 years before this is put into
effect. And even then, the bill only requires those applying for permanent
residency (a green card) to be pursuing a course of study "to achieve an
understanding of English and knowledge and understanding" of civics.
Furthermore, the secretary of Homeland Security can waive these already loose
standards in many cases.
The sponsors
promised that those "with a serious criminal background or who pose a
threat to our national security" would be ineligible for legal status. But
the bill allows the Homeland Security secretary, under certain conditions, to
grant it to gang members; those with major misdemeanor criminal convictions
(including felonies pleaded to misdemeanors) for serious crimes, including drug
offenses, sexual abuse and prostitution; those with arrest records of any
length; fugitives from deportation orders; or those who have been deported and
illegally reentered.
The sponsors
promised that people here illegally would not be eligible for public benefits.
But, after the immediate grant of legal status, the legislation confers
permanent residency within 10 years after passage (in many cases sooner),
guaranteeing eligibility for federal benefits at a staggering long-term cost.
In the short term, many would become eligible for state public assistance
programs upon receiving the initial amnesty.
The sponsors
promised the bill would prevent future visa overstays. The Government
Accountability Office said in 2007 that without a biometric exit system, the
DHS "cannot ensure the integrity of the immigration system by identifying
and removing those people who have overstayed." The 9/11 Commission
has said such a system is essential to national security. Congress passed six laws mandating the
implementation of such a system at all air, land and sea entry points. But
instead of finally requiring enforcement of these laws, the bill merely calls
for a pilot system at a small sampling of airports, and excludes land ports of
entry.
The sponsors
promised that the bill would not significantly increase legal immigration.
However, it will grant legal status to at least 30 million immigrants over the
next 10 years if you add up the proposed surge in legal arrivals, approval of
4.5 million previous green card applicants, plus work authorization and legal
residency for an estimated 11 million here unlawfully today. The number grows
higher if you take into account the removal of annual caps on migration for
immediate family members.
And, despite
promised protections for U.S. workers, the bill would double the
number of guest workers admitted annually. Such a large influx would be
disastrous for the wages and job prospects of U.S. workers.
On every
major front, this legislation fails to deliver on its core promises. It
delivers only for the special-interest groups who helped write it. Should it
pass, it would represent the ultimate triumph of the Washington elite over the everyday citizen to whom
Congress properly owes its loyalty.
Jeff Sessions
(R-Ala.) is the ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee.
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