[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 48 (Wednesday, March 26, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H2652-H2653]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IMMIGRATION REFORM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Michigan (Mr. Kildee) for 5 minutes.
Mr. KILDEE. Madam Speaker, as I have mentioned a few times when I
have come to the floor in the last 14 months now, I am a member of the
freshman class, elected in 2012. I am proud of that fact. I am proud of
it for several reasons, but one of the things that is significant about
this class, particularly on our side of the aisle here as Democrats, is
that it is the most diverse group of individuals ever elected to the
United States Congress in a single class. In fact, its diversity is
such that it is made up of a majority of minorities, women, and LGBT
members--a majority minority class. Its diversity gives us tremendous
strength. As I sit with my colleagues, it is amazing to me the vast
perspectives that we bring, and I think it has brought to us much
better opportunity and a much better ability to see the needs of this
country and to address them.
It is the diversity of this Congress, and especially of this Congress
elected in 2012, that is its principal strength. I say that because it
is my view that it is the diversity of our Nation that is our greatest
strength. What makes America exceptional is its diversity, and that
diversity is the result of a culture and of values that have been
welcoming to people from all corners of the world to come here and make
the U.S. home--to build businesses, to bring their families, to invest
in community--and to be a part of something that we have never seen
before on the
[[Page H2653]]
face of the planet, which is a nation of immigrants.
For far too long, however, the need to reform our obsolete
immigration system has been a low priority for the House leadership. It
has been, essentially, on the back burner. Americans have said loud and
clear that they want Congress to act on comprehensive immigration
reform, and it doesn't seem to matter whom we talk to. For people on
the left and the right, across the different regions of this country,
the need for immigration reform is increasingly clear, not just because
it reflects our values, but because many see it as in our vital
economic interest that we reform our obsolete immigration policies and
return to the values that made this country so great. It is that
welcoming value, that value that says: Come here. Be a part of this
Nation. Help grow it. Help build it, and help contribute to its
productivity.
Last year, when immigration reform was, obviously, coming before us
because so many Members were expressing the need for it, we heard the
Speaker say that the Senate should act first and that he would await
Senate action before bringing comprehensive immigration reform to the
floor of the House of Representatives. Last year, the Senate acted. The
Senate acted in a bipartisan fashion by a vote of 68-32 and passed
comprehensive immigration reform. It was not a perfect piece of
legislation--none of them are--but they passed comprehensive
immigration reform, which is something that people in this country have
been asking for for a long time.
But nothing. Nothing was brought to the House. In fact, while we had
immigration reform ready to go--we have a bipartisan bill here in the
House of Representatives--silence from the leadership on the Republican
side.
Then earlier this year, in January, the Speaker said that, once he
had been able to present to his Conference the principles by which the
Republican Conference would pursue comprehensive immigration reform, we
would be able to then turn to this question and move forward on what
the American people have been asking for for a long time. That was in
January. Next week, it is April, and the House and the American people
still wait.
There is overwhelming support for comprehensive immigration reform.
It comes from labor. It comes from our business community. It comes
from the agriculture community. It is so rare that we have an issue
like this that is number one fundamental to who we are as Americans,
and it is so rare that we have an issue that unites the people who very
often on this very floor have their differences manifest in the debates
of Congress. Now we have an issue that is consistent with our history,
that is consistent with our values, and that is supported by big and
small businesses, by agriculture interests, by organized labor, by
Democrats and Republicans.
It is long overdue. It is time for us to get about the business of
the American people and to take immigration reform up now.
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