[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 81 (Monday, June 10, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4027-S4028]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IMMIGRATION REFORM
Mr. REID. Mr. President, for most of her life Anna Ledesma has been
afraid. She was a model student at Centennial High School in Las Vegas,
an artist and a member of the Key Club. As one of the top academics of
a large high school, she received the Millennium Scholarship to study
nursing at the College of Southern Nevada. Now she is studying hard for
her nursing exams. But 23-year-old Anna has lived for a long time with
the constant fear that she will be deported. She is an undocumented
immigrant. She was born in the Philippines and brought here by her
parents when she was 7 years old. She was in the second grade.
This is what Anna told the Las Vegas Sun newspaper:
I would tell myself that they're not going to deport me
because I'm a nursing student and I'm working really hard and
I want to make a difference in my community . . . [But] all
the time, constantly in the back of my head, I think about
being deported and having to start over.
Thanks to a directive issued last year by President Obama, Anna and
800,000 other young people like her--young people who are American in
all but paperwork--won't be deported. President Obama's directive
suspended deportation of DREAMers--students brought to America
illegally when they were children. These young people share our
language, they share our culture, and they share our love for America,
which in most cases is the only country they have ever known. Like
Anna, the DREAMers are talented, patriotic young men and women who want
to defend our Nation in the military, get a college education, and work
hard to help their communities and our country.
Still, the Republican majority in the House of Representatives sent a
chilling message last week to Anna and others when it voted to roll
back President Obama's directive. Republicans voted to resume
deportation of upstanding young people--I repeat, just like Anna--who
were brought to this country illegally through no fault of their own.
That is why it is vital that Congress act at long last to fix this
Nation's broken immigration system.
President Obama's directive is temporary--and squarely in the
crosshairs of the tea party-driven Republican rightwing. The directive
is also no remedy for more than 10 million others--many of whom are the
parents or siblings of DREAMers--who are living here without the proper
paperwork.
But a permanent commonsense solution to our dysfunctional system is
in sight. The bipartisan legislation on
[[Page S4028]]
which the Senate is now working is the solution our economy needs, it
is the solution immigrant families need, and it is the solution Anna
needs.
This bill isn't perfect. That is the nature of legislating.
Compromise is necessary and inevitable. But this measure takes
important steps to reform our broken legal immigration system,
strengthen border security, and hold unscrupulous employers
accountable.
Over the next 3 weeks Senators will propose a number of ideas to make
the legislation better. Some will offer ideas to make it worse. But
those suggestions must preserve the heart of the bill--a pathway to
earned citizenship that begins by going to the back of the line, paying
taxes and fines, learning English, and getting right with the law.
Whether we are Democrats or Republicans, whether we are from red States
or blue States, we can all agree that the current system is broken. We
can all agree on the need for action. This bipartisan legislation is
our best chance in many, many years to bend the system toward it
working right. We need to mend this broken system.
The Senate is about to engage in this important debate about the kind
of country we are and must continue to be. This Nation was founded on
the promise that success should not be an accident of birth but,
rather, a just reward for hard work and determination. It is no wonder
so many people from so many nations wish to share that promise, but
they can't all get the promise of coming to America, and that is what
this legislation is all about.
The United States has always welcomed immigrants, and that is never
going to change. For those like Anna, the words of the Jewish proverb
are appropriate: Dreams do not die. Therefore, it is up to us to help
fulfill those dreams and fix our broken immigration system.
____________________