[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 47 (Wednesday, March 21, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1921-S1922]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IRISH E3 VISA BILL
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, yesterday afternoon I had the honor of
attending the annual Speaker's Luncheon celebrating the long and
enduring partnership between the Irish and American people. Among the
guests of honor were the President and Vice President and Irish Prime
Minister Enda Kenny. And this past Saturday, St. Patrick's Day, I
joined Prime Minister Kenny, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn and Chicago
Mayor Rahm Emmanuel to march in Chicago's annual St. Patrick's Day
parade. As one of the 40 million Americans of Irish descent, the chance
to celebrate St. Patrick's Day with the Prime Minister of Ireland twice
in 4 days is a rare joy.
At the parade on Saturday, Prime Minister Kenny hailed Chicago as
``the most American of American cities.'' It is also the most Irish of
American cities, home to the largest population of Irish-Americans in
the United States. On St. Patrick's Day in Chicago, the river and the
beer both run green and it seems that everyone is Irish either by
heritage or simply by osmosis.
There is good reason that Americans of all backgrounds embrace St.
Patrick's Day with such enthusiasm. From our earliest days as a nation,
America and Ireland and America have been united by unbreakable bonds
of friendship and family and by a shared commitment to liberty and
freedom.
In fact, there might not be a United States of America were it not
for the Irish. That is not just my opinion. That was the assessment of
General George Washington and of Britain's Lord
[[Page S1922]]
Mountjoy, who, in a speech to Parliament declared plainly, ``We have
lost America through the Irish.''
The largest ethnic group to sign the Declaration of Independence were
those with Irish roots, Charles Dunlop of County Tyrone printed the
first copies, and the first man to read it before Congress was Charles
Thomson of Derry, Secretary of the Continental Congress. When the
Continental Congress was in desperate need of finances, supporters in
Dublin, Cork, and other Irish cities took up collections to help the
struggling new nation. Irish-born generals ranked among Washington's
most trusted officers and Irish soldiers formed the backbone of
Washington's army. At Valley Forge, it is estimated that almost half
the army was Irish.
In the more than 2 centuries since then, America has been enriched
immeasurably by the contributions of the Irish and Irish-Americans in
every field and every walk of life.
Twenty American Presidents--nearly half--can trace their lineage to
Ireland, from George Washington to Barack Obama of the Kearneys of
Moneygall. And the contributions go both ways. Just as the sons of Erin
helped make George Washington America's first President, it was a son
of America, Brooklyn-born Eamonn deValera, who, in 1921, became the
first president of a free Ireland.
In December, Senators Schumer, Leahy and I introduced an amendment
that recognizes the special relationship between the United States and
Ireland. Our Irish E3 visa amendment would allow a small number of
Irish citizens--10,500 a year--to work in America for 2 years, pay
taxes and contribute to Social Security.
Our proposal is an amendment to the Fairness for High-Skilled
Immigrants Act, which passed the House last November with overwhelming
bipartisan support. Shortly after we introduced our amendment, my
colleague from Illinois, Senator Kirk, and Senator Brown of
Massachusetts introduced a similar measure.
Our proposal is a common-sense measure that would improve the
fairness and efficiency of our immigration system and further
strengthen America's special relationship with Ireland, a nation to
which we owe so much.
Our proposal has the support of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, the
Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform, Chicago Celts for Immigration
Reform headed by my friend Billy Lawless of Chicago, and many other
organizations.
All 53 Democratic Senators--a solid majority of this Senate--have
also pledged their support for our proposal. Despite this broad support
inside and outside of Congress, at this time there is an objection on
the Republican side to passing our bill.
We want to work with our Republican colleagues to break this impasse
and create the Irish E3 visas this year. As Prime Minister Kenny has
said, Ireland's economy will recover from its current difficulties. But
with Irish emigration higher than it has been in decades, it is in the
interests of both Ireland and America that we act now, without delay,
to create a fair and legal way for Irish citizens to work temporarily
in America.
Twenty-nine years ago, Speaker Tip O'Neill hosted the first St.
Patrick's Day luncheon in Congress. His special guest at that first
Speaker's St. Patrick's Day Luncheon was another Irish American leader
who said, when he visited Ireland, ``Today I come back to you as a
descendant of people who were buried here in pauper's graves.''
That special guest was President Ronald Reagan and that first
Speaker's Luncheon was arranged to try to ease tensions between the two
leaders, who embodied very different political traditions, but who
shared a love of Ireland and of their Irish heritage.
The plan worked. While Ronald Reagan and Tip O'Neill never did see
eye-to-eye on politics, they formed a respectful relationship that
enabled them to work together in America's interest. So I ask our
Republican friends: Let us walk in the footsteps of Ronald Reagan and
Tip O'Neill and work together to pass the Irish E3 visa bill this year.
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