[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 98 (Wednesday, June 27, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H4070]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IMMIGRATION POLICY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Barletta) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BARLETTA. Mr. Speaker, 2 weeks ago, two new words were added to
the American immigration policy: ``Prosecutorial discretion.''
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano recently ordered
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials to not deport certain
classes of aliens who are in the country illegally. Instead, these
illegal aliens will be given 2-year work permits that can be renewed
indefinitely. The reason Secretary Napolitano and President Obama have
given the American people for this de facto amnesty program is
prosecutorial discretion.
The Secretary and the President claim that the Department of Homeland
Security personnel can use their discretion to decide what individuals
they can and cannot deport. But in Federal immigration law, this
discretion does not exist. Congress took it away from the executive
branch in 1996 when it passed the Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigrant Responsibility Act.
{time} 1030
The law requires, and I will repeat that, this law requires
immigration officials to address illegal aliens when they become aware
that they are in the country illegally. It clearly spells out the
actions that must be taken by Federal officials.
In fact, according to one of the Nation's leading experts on
immigration, Congress, frustrated at the time because the Clinton
administration was using it to let thousands of illegal aliens remain
in the United States, wrote the law to remove that discretion. In other
words, the discretion that President Obama and Secretary Napolitano
claim they use no longer exists because Congress deliberately
eliminated it in 1996. By stating they still have it, President Obama
and Secretary Napolitano are actually ordering Federal immigration
officials to break the law.
Since the executive branch is citing a privilege that no longer
exists in ordering Federal immigration officials to break the 1996
immigration act which was passed by Congress and signed into law,
today, I'm calling on the Judiciary and Homeland Security Committees to
hold hearings to investigate the legality of this decision to use so-
called ``prosecutorial discretion.''
Just this week we heard from the United States Supreme Court that
because the Federal Government writes immigration laws, State laws must
work in harmony with the Federal Government. In striking down part of
Arizona's S.B. 1070, the High Court's majority said that Federal law
shall be the supreme law of the land when laws do not work in harmony
with the Federal scheme or when Federal law is explicit. Well, in this
case, the law is very clear: there is no prosecutorial discretion.
Now, Mr. Speaker, my district in Pennsylvania has one of the highest
unemployment rates in the State, and our country is still reeling from
one of the worst recessions we have ever faced. The Department of
Homeland Security's unlawful action could have grave consequences on
our labor force and on our economy, both at the local and national
levels.
Additionally, allowing individuals with forged documents to remain in
this country could pose a serious threat to our homeland security.
Let me also state that I am troubled by the expansion of the
authority of the President that he believes he has. In the past,
President Obama clearly stated he had to follow existing immigration
laws. During a town hall meeting with Univision in March 2011, he said:
America is a Nation of laws, which means I, as the
President, am obligated to enforce the law. I don't have a
choice about that.
During that same town hall meeting, President Obama also said:
There are enough laws on the books by Congress that are
very clear in terms of how we have to enforce our immigration
system, that for me to simply, through executive order,
ignore those congressional mandates would not conform with my
appropriate role as President.
So what changed? In the last 15 months, did Congress grant the
President new powers? I don't remember doing that. Fifteen months ago,
President Obama said he can't ignore congressional mandates. But
suddenly, 2 weeks ago, he can? Again, I ask, what changed?
I'm concerned President Obama overstepped his constitutional
authority in this case, just as he did in claiming executive privilege
in Operation Fast and Furious. That's why these two committees must
hold formal hearings and investigate this claim of discretion and the
unilateral rewriting of Federal immigration policy.
____________________