[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 155 (Wednesday, December 5, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7420-S7422]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STEM JOBS ACT
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, this last week the House of
Representatives passed a bipartisan piece of legislation called the
STEM Jobs Act. For those who are unfamiliar with the term STEM, it
stands for science, technology, engineering, and math--the hard
sciences programs that we have too few graduates from in our colleges
and universities. This bill passed in the House of Representatives with
245 votes and was originally sponsored by my friend and colleague Lamar
Smith of Texas. It is very similar to a piece of legislation I myself
introduced earlier this year.
The goal of this legislation is one that I think enjoys broad
bipartisan support, and that is to help the United States retain more
of the highly skilled immigrants who come to study at our colleges and
universities. In particular, this bill would make eligible for a green
card those who graduate from the STEM fields who get a master's degree
or a Ph.D. We would not add to the net number of green cards that would
be eligible. There are 55,000 diversity lottery visa green cards that
would be substituted for by these STEM green cards.
We all know America's immigration system is broken. Unfortunately, it
causes self-inflicted wounds in many respects, but particularly by
driving away highly skilled foreign workers who want to start
businesses and create jobs right here in America. This is not about
hiring foreign workers to perform jobs where we have qualified
Americans waiting in line for these jobs. The fact of the matter is, we
do not produce enough American-born workers to fill the job vacancies
in these fields.
Many of these potential job creators and entrepreneurs attend our
colleges and universities. You might even say that the American
taxpayer helps subsidize their education because many of them received
world-class training at our public and private colleges and
universities and then reluctantly return home to pursue their careers
because they cannot get a visa or cannot get a green card here in
America. We are cultivating human capital and then sending those
individuals back home.
This is an area where there is broad support. My colleague Senator
Moran recently wrote a ``Dear Colleague'' letter which points out that
roughly--he cites in the letter that more than three-quarters of voters
support a STEM-type visa. He quotes in this letter, dated July 20,
2012, 87 percent of Democrats polled, 72 percent of Republicans polled,
and 65 percent of Independents support the creation of a STEM visa. Of
course if you think about it, it is common sense. Why in the world
would we want to subsidize the education of these students from other
countries, train them in these highly specialized and highly desirable
fields, and then simply send them home?
I have introduced legislation over the past years that would increase
the number of H1B visas, which are not green cards. They are actually
temporary visas that would allow more of these foreign national
students, trained in these STEM fields, to stay here in the United
States and help create jobs here in the United States. This bill
actually goes a step further. What it does is it provides them a green
card, which is the first step toward a path to citizenship.
If you believe our current policy is a self-inflicted wound on our
economy, you are exactly right. We are educating brilliant students and
then compelling them to go to work in Shanghai or Singapore rather than
San Antonio or the Silicon Valley. Meanwhile, we are handing out tens
of thousands of diversity visas to immigrants chosen by random lottery,
without regard to any qualifications they may have when it comes to job
creation and entrepreneurship. It makes absolutely no sense.
I believe we need an immigration policy that serves our national
interests. If there is one thing that we need more than anything else
now, we need job creators and entrepreneurs in the United States. We
know in the global economy it is people with special skills in science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics who are the ones who are going
to help us create jobs and grow the economy--not just for these
individuals but for the people who are hired by the startup businesses
they will create.
The STEM Jobs Act would mitigate the problem with the diversity
lottery visa, which again does not distinguish between immigrants based
upon the qualifications they have or their ability to create jobs or be
entrepreneurs. It would mitigate this problem by making our immigration
system more economically sensible. It would establish new visa
categories for 55,000 STEM graduates of American research institutions
and would eliminate the random diversity lottery visa to offset these
new green cards.
Our competitors abroad are observing this brain drain that America is
experiencing and they are taking advantage of it. In a global economy
they are more than happy to take the best and the brightest foreign
students who come and train in the United States and to encourage them
to come to their countries and create jobs and economic growth there.
This relatively minor change to our immigration system could deliver a
major boost to U.S. economic growth. I realize many of our colleagues
have different priorities when it comes to fixing our broken
immigration system, but the reforms contained in the STEM Jobs Act
enjoy bipartisan support.
I urge my colleagues, let's show the world we can agree on this
commonsense, bipartisan immigration reform. Let's do something for our
economy and let's take this first step in solving our broken
immigration system.
Before I turn the floor over to my colleague from Kentucky, who I
know has some comments on this topic, let me address two issues
quickly. I can anticipate hearing from some of our colleagues that this
does not solve all of what is broken in our immigration system, and I
concede that is correct. But what we need more than anything is to
develop some confidence-building measures for the American people to
demonstrate that we can come together, Republicans and Democrats alike,
and do what needs to be done which almost everybody agrees is common
sense and then we can follow on with other solutions on a targeted
basis for our broken immigration system.
I once believed, back in 2005, when Senator Jon Kyl from Arizona and
I introduced something we called the Comprehensive Border Security and
Immigration Reform Act of 2005, we should address this issue
comprehensively. We tried in 2007. That bill failed on the Senate floor
when Senator Reid pulled the bill from the floor.
I believe now, given the temper of the times and given the skepticism
with which the American people view us here in Congress, the only way
we are going to crack this nut is to start small in targeted reforms
such as the STEM Jobs Act. I believe this is the beginning and not the
end of fixing what is broken about our immigration reform system. But
if we cannot do this--if we cannot do this--I have next to no
confidence we can do the rest that needs to be done as well.
[[Page S7421]]
A final point. I believe we should be family-friendly when it comes
to our immigration system. This STEM Jobs Act takes a very important
step in making sure families can be unified. Under the current law,
someone who has a green card is not entitled to bring their immediate
family into the United States to live with them while they are waiting
for their eligibility for a green card. The STEM Jobs Act, though,
addresses that by recreating the V visa, which would help us retain
more of the potential job creators but it would also help unify the
immediate families of U.S. permanent residents. Right now, the spouses
and children of U.S. permanent residents have to wait outside, to wait
in line for their green card, which causes families to be separated--
something that none of us believes is an optimal situation. The STEM
Jobs Act would let them wait inside the United States, unified with
their loved ones until they are off the waiting list, which takes
several years, and thus would promote family unification. That is yet
another reason why this bill deserves our support.
I yield to my distinguished colleague from Kentucky, who I know
supports this approach, for any comments he would care to make.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Kentucky.
Mr. PAUL. I compliment the Senator from Texas for being a leader in
immigration reform. There are many of us in the Republican Party who
wish to have immigration reform. I do wish it be noted for the Record
today that we can take a small step forward toward immigration reform
today. This bill that would allow Ph.D.s, master's, successful
graduates to come into this country with a green card could be passed
today. This bill is at the desk and we will ask consent from the
majority party today to pass this bill.
I will also note the President and the Members of the majority party
will object. The President has said he will not pass this unless he can
get everything he wants. When I go home or when I talk to folks with
the media, they say: Why can't you guys get along? Why can't you do
anything in Washington? Why is this system so horribly broken?
This is precisely why. We agree on this bill. I think the other side
will stand and say they like the concept, but they do not want to do it
yet. They want to wait until we agree on everything. Guess what. We are
never going to agree on everything so we are never going to get
immigration reform if we cannot start agreeing to some things and
moving the ball forward.
This is the same on tax reform. This is the same on entitlement
reform. We lurch from deadline to deadline. There will be a deadline,
the so-called fiscal cliff coming up, and the President has announced
that we do not have enough time to do entitlement reform. We don't have
enough time to do tax reform. We don't have enough time to do
immigration reform.
When are we going to start? When is there going to be a committee
hearing designated toward entitlement reform? I have been here 2 years.
There is no such committee. When will there be hearings on immigration
reform? There will not be time. Deadlines will pass.
But not break things up into smaller pieces? Why have to have some
enormous fiscal cliff or whatever that everybody has to agree to a
thousand moving parts? We are of different persuasions, of different
parties, of different beliefs. We are never going to agree on a
thousand things. Why don't we start passing some things we can agree
to? This is a small step forward. We can pass this bill today.
Does the Senator have an explanation that can help me understand why
we have to have empty partisanship, why we cannot move forward to pass
some small things for immigration reform?
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I would say in response to the Senator
from Kentucky that I have been in the Senate for some time now. I have
been engaged in the immigration debates for a long time. I think one of
the biggest challenges is we have tried to deal with this in a
comprehensive way that has so many moving parts it is almost impossible
to find a majority in the Senate, much less the House, in order to
support all the various components of it. That is one of the things I
like about this bill. It is narrow, it deals with a consensus reform--
commonsense reform--and it avoids a lot of the controversy associated
with other parts of the immigration subject. I do believe we owe it to
the American people not to stop here, but it is a good place to start.
Once we pass this legislation and people see that we have acted
responsibly and in America's best interests, then we can regain their
confidence that we can deal with other broken parts of the immigration
system.
Mr. PAUL. I think another important point to make about this is we
truly have different philosophical differences with people on the other
side. But what people at home ask me is when you agree with the other
side, when the other side says we want this part of immigration reform,
why can't we do it? That to me is empty partisanship. Are we afraid to
give Republicans credit for introducing immigration reform in the
Republican-controlled House? Are we afraid it might be perceived as a
Republican idea? That to me is empty partisanship. I routinely vote
with the other side on some issues that some on this side object to
because I believe in the issue. This is an issue where we all should be
able to agree on immigration reform. Yet the other side will object to
moving the ball forward on immigration reform. That I don't understand
and that I see as empty partisanship, and that is the dysfunction of
this body when we agree on something we still cannot pass it.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, will my colleague yield for a question?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Does the Senator yield?
Unanimous Consent Request--H.R. 6429
Mr. CORNYN. I ask the Senator to withhold for a moment because I do
have a unanimous consent request. I understand the Senator likely will
have an objection to that. We have other Senators who are going to
speak. Given the limitation on our time, what I wish to do, Mr.
President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the
immediate consideration of Calendar No. 559, H.R. 6429, that the bill
be read a third time and passed, the motion to reconsider be made and
laid on the table, and that any statements relating to the bill be
printed in the Record.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. SCHUMER. Reserving the right to object, and I will object and
explain my objection.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. OK.
Mr. SCHUMER. Very simply, I heard my colleague from Kentucky say if
we agree on something, let's pass it. We do agree on increasing STEM
visas. I am offering a proposal that does that and does it in a more
fulsome way than the proposal of my friend from Texas. But what we do
not do is take away other visas or add in other extraneous positions.
I would say the logic of my friend from Kentucky is impeccable, but
because of constraints on the other side they could not pass a plain
bill that just added STEM visas. They had to take away other visas that
my colleague from Texas does not like--but many people do. They had to
add in a few other provisions.
I would simply say that if my colleague from Kentucky says we should
join together on something we agree with, I will bet he agrees with our
proposal as well. And I will bet he agrees with it even more than the
other proposal because we add two things that are not in the bill of
the Senator from Texas. No. 1, we allow unused STEM visas to be used to
reduce the backlog of employment green cards. There are 200,000 people
waiting. It may well be that the 55,000 visas in the bill of the
Senator from Texas are not going to be used up. That is what experts
say. Second, we allow STEM green cards to be used by entrepreneurs, a
bill that has been introduced by I believe Senator Coons, Senator
Moran--bipartisan--Senator Warner as well.
I am going to object to this bill, not because it increases STEM
visas and not for some larger purpose--although I do understand that if
we pick off all the pieces each of us wants, we are not going to get
comprehensive reform, and that is why the Hispanic Caucus opposes the
bill of the Senator from Texas but supports our bill. I understand
that. But if we just want to do STEM and do it in the best way possible
without other provisions, because that is what we agree on, I would
urge my friend from Kentucky, and those
[[Page S7422]]
Members on the other side, to support our bill.
So I object to the Cornyn bill, and I will be offering a bill on the
same subject that is purer, cleaner, and more full on STEM visas than
the proposal that was made by my good friend from Texas.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard. The Senator from Texas.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I understand that the Senator from New
York has objected, and of course here we go again making the perfect
the enemy of the good and not moving forward on commonsense immigration
reform in an area where there is a consensus.
There are several problems with the Senator's proposal. One is that
it has not passed the House and this one has. It also has a 2-year
sunset provision, as I understand, and there is no family unification
provision. Also, it doesn't eliminate the diversity lottery visa which
allows people to get green cards without regard to the qualifications
that they bring to this country to create jobs and start new
businesses.
I know we have the distinguished Senator from North Dakota here.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, if I might be recognized to offer my
proposal? I have let my friend from Texas respond, but I have the--
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Will the Senator from Texas yield?
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, we have four Senators who are prepared to
speak, and I just want to make sure we have adequate time to speak. I
ask that any time that is used by the distinguished Senator from New
York not be added to or subtracted from our time. We have retained a
total of 45 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. CORNYN. Under those circumstances, I agree to yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
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