[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 53 (Wednesday, April 2, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H2848-H2851]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
COMPREHENSIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2013, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from Iowa (Mr.
King) for 30 minutes.
Mr. KING of Iowa. Mr. Speaker, I appreciate very much the honor and
privilege to address you here on the floor of the United States House
of Representatives and to follow my good friend, the gentleman from
Texas, Judge Gohmert, in this presentation here tonight.
I have been watching forward with increasing concern about some of
the potential decisions that might be made here in this House of
Representatives. We have been through some long immigration debates in
this saga of what happens to the future and the destiny of the United
States of America. It is something that goes back, I will say, in the
modern era, to sometime January 5, 2004, when then-President George
Bush gave his speech that launched their effort to advance
``comprehensive immigration reform.''
Mr. Speaker, I had my discussion with the President's west wing at
that time, meaning west wing of the White House. I advised them--I
should say, I advised him that what you have described here is amnesty.
However you want to redefine it, however you want to try to call it
comprehensive immigration reform, in the end, amnesty is amnesty. The
American people will know what amnesty is, and they will reject amnesty
because it is bad policy for our country.
Well, since that time, I will say that that has proven to be true in
each one of these national debates that we have had and these waves of
national debates that we have had.
That debate that took place in 2005--excuse me, 2004 into 2005 and
beyond, when there were, at times, tens of thousands of people, often
coming in on buses wearing identical white T-shirts, pressing Congress
to suspend the rule of law and give them a special path to citizenship.
Through that, this discussion has pivoted on what I called, at the
time, the scarlet letter A, called amnesty.
The definition of ``amnesty,'' it comes in different forms. Black's
Law has one. There are a couple of other definitions for ``amnesty.''
But the practical definition that applies in this political arena that
we are in, this cultural American arena that we are in, Mr. Speaker, is
this: to grant amnesty is to pardon immigration lawbreakers and reward
them with the objective of their crime.
Now, the objective of their crime--and in most cases it is a crime.
It is not necessarily someone who is unlawfully present in the United
States or necessarily guilty of committing a
[[Page H2849]]
crime, but it is true in most cases. In any case, we don't always know
the objective of their crime, whether it is to come into the United
States to get a job and seek a better life and take care of their
family. If they cross the border illegally, that is a crime. If they
come in legally and overstay their visa, then that is a violation, a
civil misdemeanor. And yet, if they go to work in this country, they
have to fraudulently misrepresent themselves in order to legally work,
then in that case, it is often document fraud, and that is also a
crime.
So the objective of their crime may have been a job; it may have been
a home; it may have been what is planned to be and often is a better
life; and it might be someone coming in here with a different kind of
intention. We know that coming across our southern border we have had,
I will say, scores of people, at a minimum, who are persons of interest
from nations of interest.
Now, that is the verbiage that gets used in our security personnel.
If they are from a nation of interest, that is a nation that is in the
list, having been a nation that spawns terrorists. If they are a person
of interest, they are a person from that nation that is a nation of
interest that spawns terrorists.
So you have got kind of a double marker here. Somebody shows up
coming across our southern border and they are from Yemen, for example,
they are going to be a person of interest from a nation of interest,
which means we should pay more attention to that because they are a
risk to the security of United States because that is a place that
terrorists come from in the records that we have and the data that we
know. It doesn't mean that everybody that might come across our
southern border from Yemen is a terrorist. It means, though, just what
the definition is. This happens on a regular basis.
When anyone is interdicted, apprehended, coming across our border who
is a person of interest from a nation of interest, they are turned
over, as soon as possible, to the FBI. That act immediately closes the
case as far as public discussion is concerned because now it is
classified. So, if they are continually classifying the reports and any
prosecutions and how we handle persons of interest from nations of
interest, that means, Mr. Speaker, that we don't know how many people
have been caught coming into the United States with ill will towards us
or suspicion of ill will towards us. That is classified.
What I know is I know of seven cases where we have interdicted a
person of interest from a nation of interest. And the reason I know
about them is because, having spent time on the border, been down there
when a person of that definition is interdicted and I gain knowledge of
that circumstance, same business day, early enough in the day and close
enough to the incident that they can tell me about it before that
individual or individuals are handed over to the FBI where the case
becomes classified.
This Congress doesn't seem to be aware that this circumstance exists
at all, so they whistle through the graveyard. And it may be a more
appropriate explanation than I had actually thought when I started to
say it, whistling through the graveyard here on what could be going on
inside the United States when people come across the border who are
from sources that we normally identify as sources for terrorism. That
is one piece.
Another is, 80 to 90 percent of the illegal drugs consumed in America
come from or through Mexico. It isn't all their fault. One is that some
of those drugs are produced and smuggled into Mexico and then into the
United States. Another is there is a huge demand in the United States
for illegal drugs. The value of that marketplace in this country could
well be over $60 billion. That is 60 billion with a b. But even the
Drug Enforcement doesn't know that number, and they aren't comfortable
producing that number. That number actually comes from a media report.
In any case, so we have persons of interest from nations of interest.
We have 80 to 90 percent of the illegal drugs coming from or through to
Mexico. It is a threat to our country, a threat to our society.
And on top of that, we have a border that remains porous. We have a
President whose administration has been announcing that he has been
deporting record numbers of people, but when you look at the numbers,
you find out that he is double counting and he has changed the
definition of ``removals.''
{time} 1815
He is counting those who are turned back at the border, those who are
caught crossing the border that do a voluntary return to avoid it going
on their record so that they can avoiding being subject to the 3- or
10-year bar and double-counting some of those that are turned back.
So here are the real numbers, and it is this: That the lead
deportations that actually took place in our modern era under--not the
George Bush administration, Mr. Speaker--but they took place under the
Bill Clinton administration in the year 2000 when there was some number
above 1.8 million removals from the country. And we have a President
now, under Barack Obama, down around 450,000 removals from the country,
a long, long ways from being what they sometimes accept the definition
of him as being the Deporter-in-Chief.
No President has taken the position that this President has, that he
picks and chooses the laws that he wants to enforce and ignores the
rest. No President has so broadly gone out there and violated the
limitations in article two of the Constitution.
Just within immigration itself, when the Morton Memos came out--and
those are the memos that created DACA, which is the executive amnesty
that was produced and signed by Janet Napolitano, then the Secretary of
Homeland Security, who came before the Judiciary Committee, Mr.
Speaker, and alleged repeatedly that they had prosecutorial discretion,
that they don't have the resources to enforce every law, therefore,
they have to enforce with the best effect of the resources that they
have, and stated: We have prosecutorial discretion, and it is on an
individual basis only, an individual basis only. She repeated it in her
testimony under oath before the Judiciary Committee, and I had in front
of me at the time the document that describes this, and in a page and
about a third of single-spaced 12-point type, it said, used the term
``on an individual basis only,'' by my count, in memory, seven times.
Now why would this administration remind Members of Congress,
especially members of the Judiciary Committee, that they were executing
prosecutorial discretion by waiving the application of the law to
hundreds of thousands of people altogether under this definition of
``on an individual basis only''? We know they didn't deal with them on
an individual basis only.
When you read that report and you go through and draw a couple of x's
and o's, you come to this conclusion: that Homeland Security, under the
Morton Memos of ICE, created four different classes of people, and they
are broadly exempted from the law by the definitions of the classes of
people created in the very memo that says, seven times ``on an
individual basis only.''
This was what I thought was a lame effort to try to cloak themselves
in prosecutorial discretion when there is no such thing. Mr. Speaker, I
want to emphasize this. There is no such thing as prosecutorial
discretion outside of an individual basis only. It only can be applied
on an individual basis. It cannot be applied to classes or groups of
people because everyone that is paying attention to law, the structure
of law, knows that the law defines classes and groups of people, and
the exemptions under prosecutorial discretion have to be justified,
justifiable, and on an individual basis only. This administration
didn't adhere to that, and they know it. And, Mr. Speaker, they
strategized around it so that they could grant what is the equivalent
of executive amnesty to hundreds of thousands of people.
Now Senator Jeff Sessions has released a report a little over a week
ago, and I want to thank him and his staff for the work that they have
done to dig the details out of this network of regulations and rules
and executive edicts to come down to this point: that the application
of the law almost completely exempts the law, itself, which requires
those encountered by immigration officials who are unlawfully present
in the United States to be placed into removal proceedings. That is the
law.
[[Page H2850]]
It is real clear that the DACA documents, the Morton Memos, direct
ICE to violate the very law that they have taken an oath to uphold, and
that is the requirement that they place into removal proceedings those
whom they may encounter who are unlawfully present in the United
States.
The President has ordered that they not do so, which violates their
oath to the Constitution, their fidelity to the law, and their fidelity
to the rule of law, and it usurps the directive from Congress, which
sets up immigration law here in the United States of America.
This is an appalling assault on our Constitution and on the rule of
law and on the separation of powers, and the administration knows it.
And I am not drawing this as an assumption, Mr. Speaker. I am drawing
this from this understanding.
The President has told us on a number of occasions that he taught
constitutional law as an adjunct professor at the University of
Chicago's School of Law for 10 years. Ten years of teaching the
Constitution means you can't avoid coming across these constitutional
requirements, and you can't avoid addressing the separation of powers
that are distinct between articles one, two, and three of our
Constitution. And if we wondered if somehow the President could have
taught con law for a decade and not run across the separation of powers
concept, or the authority that is granted to the Congress: All
legislative powers shall be vested in the body of the United States
Congress, the legislative body in article one. All powers, all
legislative powers. The President had to have taught that for 10 years.
I don't think you can take con law and not encounter that principle.
And he didn't.
He didn't avoid that principle. In fact, he was teaching it as
recently as March 28, 2011, when he was speaking to a high school class
at a high school here in Washington, D.C., when he said to them: You
want me to enact the DREAM Act by executive order. But I am here to
tell you that you have studied this, and you know that the Congress
doesn't allow that. I don't have the authority to implement the DREAM
Act by executive order because--and he said this this way--Congress
writes the laws; the judicial branch interprets the laws; and my job is
to enforce them. It is a very compact and succinct and, I think, a
clear understanding of the three branches of government embodied in
articles one, two, and three.
So it is clear not only did the President teach this very principle
for a decade, but he--and I don't want to say ``lectured,'' but he gave
a speech on it to a high school class and said, I cannot implement this
by an executive order or fiat; it is exclusively reserved for Congress.
Some months later, though, apparently the idea was stuck in the head of
the President of the United States, and by executive fiat, he did do
just what had he said publicly he didn't have the authority to do. That
is just on the immigration piece.
We could go on through ObamaCare--the 38, 39, or more different
changes that have been applied to ObamaCare. Now, I don't assert, Mr.
Speaker, that they are all unconstitutional moves on the part of the
President, but some of them are so clearly unconstitutional that it
cannot be argued with a straight face if you know anything about the
Constitution whatsoever.
The clearest, the starkest was, the directive in ObamaCare that the
employer mandate shall be implemented in each month after December of
2013. That is real clear. But the President announced months ago, we
are going to delay the employer mandate for another year. They are
going to add another year to the implementation date. So it is as if
the President--you know he said he had a pen and a cell phone. It was
as if the President took his pen, went to page whatever it is in the
2,700 pages of ObamaCare, and went in there--it would be a red pen, not
a blue one--and drew a line through the number that said 2013, and in
each month after December of 2013, drew a line through that and just
changed the number 13 to the number 2014.
Now, the President does not have the authority to do that. If he
does, then the work of this Congress is meaningless, and it would never
have a relation to anything, except we would be a debate body here. So
we could be in the business of deciding whether we side for or against
the President without any power whatsoever. If the President continues
to exert this authority--it is unconstitutional, it is a violation of
his constitutional authorities and the separation of power. There are
multiple lawsuits that are working their way through the courts, and I
think that the administration has done a calculation of, they are not
going to catch up with us before the President's term is over and he
goes off into his happy perpetual golfing land, that he might.
But this immigration issue sets the destiny for America. It is not a
policy like ObamaCare, which is the largest social movement in my adult
lifetime, social piece of legislation, social engineering piece of
legislation. It is a takeover of a huge percentage of our economy, some
say as much as 17 percent of our economy. It is a directive that orders
American citizens, for the first time, to buy a product that is
produced and specified by the Federal Government or be fined and
punished by the Internal Revenue Service.
That is where we are with ObamaCare. That is what it does to this
God-given liberty and says, You shall be a subject of the State, and
you will buy a product that is approved by the Federal Government. And
if you fail to do what we have told you to do, ordered you to do, then
we are going to fine you and punish you, and we are going to use the
Internal Revenue Service to chase you down and dun you for that money.
Now, that is an appalling thing to a free people. But we should think
of that in the context of, first of all, if the Federal Government can
order you to buy an insurance policy, they can order you to buy an
automobile, they can order you to buy a washing machine, they can order
you to go to the grocery store and buy broccoli. They can forbid you
from buying--let's just say butter, or whatever it is that the First
Lady might think is not the healthy diet for the American people. By
the way, they are already dictating the calorie limitations to our kids
in school.
This country has become not so much the land of the free any longer.
It has become a land where they seek to micromanage every aspect of our
lives. It has started. It is going down that way.
But if the White House can configure a bill and pass it through this
Congress by hook, crook, and legislative shenanigans, and, in the
process of making the deal to get the votes to get it passed, promise a
Member of Congress--let's just say a Member of Congress from Michigan--
that, never fear if the language that you would like to have doesn't
become part of the law, the President will sign an executive order to
amend ObamaCare after the bill is signed if the agreement that they
make here doesn't follow through in the final piece of legislation that
comes from the Senate.
Can you imagine, Mr. Speaker, the very idea that the President would
promise to amend a bill? He has no authority to amend any bill
whatsoever. He has no authority to amend any legislation whatsoever. He
has no authority to amend existing U.S. Code of any kind whatsoever.
Now he can influence the executive branch to pass a rule, to publish
that rule and take it out for comments. And through the authority
granted to the executive branch through the Administrative Procedures
Act, they can have the force and effect of law. But they can't change
law. They can't amend law. And they cannot write a rule that changes
the directive language that is part of the law. The law is the law. The
Constitution is the foundation for this Republic, and the laws that are
passed by it are supreme, not the President.
So we have this usurpation of congressional authority from the
President. We have an ObamaCare piece of legislation that is a taking
of American liberty. And we have a President that changes it willy-
nilly at will. And not an ability in this Congress to put the brakes on
that. But maybe, just maybe the American people will go to the polls in
November and bring it around the other way. In 2016, there will be a
new President elected. That President must run on adhering to,
respecting, and reverting our country back to this Constitution.
But this country, the bedrock underneath our Constitution is free and
fair elections, confidence that they are free and fair and legitimate.
The foundation
[[Page H2851]]
is the Constitution. The Declaration is the promise; the Constitution
is the fulfillment.
As we sit here in this most blessed country in the history of the
world, Mr. Speaker, we are watching it be taken apart by executive fiat
and executive edict piece by piece. ObamaCare changed 30-some times.
Immigration changed five or six times. And a President who threatens to
go out and do that again, one who suspended Welfare to Work when it was
written specifically to tighten up, that a President couldn't suspend
the work component of Welfare to Work. And No Child Left Behind,
suspended by the application of waivers that go on because he didn't
agree with the policy and he thought he had a better policy, but he
didn't want to come to Congress because Congress might not think it is
a better policy.
This President doesn't negotiate with this Congress. He doesn't work
in a cooperative fashion. He imposes the whim of the White House on the
American people.
{time} 1830
This Congress went through a government shutdown to assert its will
and came in to second place on that because not enough Members of this
Congress had the will. We watched the Constitution be eroded because of
that lack of will.
Now, Mr. Speaker, what I see coming is an effort to grant more
amnesty through the legislative process instead of, this time, the
executive fiat or executive edict or executive overreach process, and
the President threatens to use his pen more to grant more amnesty if we
don't pass it here in the House.
We have some misguided people on my side of the aisle that ought to
be better thinkers than they are. I understand why Democrats are for
amnesty almost universally because they get the big political benefit
from it.
They have been discouraging me for years from bringing up this topic,
that Democrats have long known, Mr. Speaker, that a significant
majority, 2 to 1, 3 to 1, 5 to 1--there are even statistics out there
of 8 to 1--that newly arriving immigrants, if given an opportunity to
vote, are going to vote in those kind of statistics at least 2 to 1 for
Democrats.
Here is a King axiom, Mr. Speaker, that newly arriving immigrants
will assimilate into the politics of the locale where they arrive
because they don't know what party they are when they get here.
They will simply associate with their neighbors, their friends, and
their family. When they go to political events, if they go, they will
go with them, encouraged by them, and when they go to the polls, they
are going to take their first advice.
I look down through my neighborhood. We have fourth generation FDR
Democrats that by heritage are Democrats, by philosophy are
Republicans, but they don't change, necessarily, their voting stripes.
If someone thinks I am wrong about this, they could go to Boston, and
they could find me an Irish Catholic Republican. I am sure one of them
exists. I understand there are two. But the heritage of inheriting the
politics of the locale where you arrive as a newly arriving immigrant
is a big part of this.
That is what drives Democrats. It is not about truth, justice, and
the American way. It is not about justice and equity. It is not about
fairness. It is about political power, and it is about Democrats
seeking to expand the dependency class in America because that expands
their political class and their political leverage at the expense of
the Constitution, the rule of law, safety in the streets of America,
and at the expense of the destiny of our country.
We need to think this through much more deeply. We need to look
ahead, Mr. Speaker. We need to see that, if we make an immigration
decision in this Congress, we are going to live with that decision and
our children and our grandchildren. Every succeeding generation lives
with the decisions that we make here on immigration.
It is different than ObamaCare. ObamaCare is bad. It is a horrible
usurpation of God-given American liberty. It can be repealed. It can
even be, in components, diminished in its negative effects by some
tweaks that we could do, and I have got some on the books that I will
be advancing here in the upcoming week; but we could repeal ObamaCare.
We could undo it. We could recover. We could even somehow struggle
through a massive amendment of it and come out with a product that the
American people could live with and still have a measure of freedom;
but if we get the immigration question wrong, there is no going back to
repeal. There is no going back to change. There is no going back to
undo what would be done by the colossal mistake of amnesty.
Whatever you think about demographics, whatever you think about
political power, and whatever you think about economics, there is an
essential pillar of American exceptionalism that we can't do without
and still be a great country. It is called the rule of law.
The rule of law means that the law has to treat everyone equally.
Justice must be blind. Lady Justice stands there with the scales in her
hands, balanced, and most of the time, you will see her with a
blindfold on because Justice needs to be blind and treat everyone
equally. If we lose the rule of law, we will never be able to restore
it again.
If we sacrifice the rule of law in a misguided idea that, somehow,
our sympathy for people that want a better life--and by the way, there
are some 6 billion of them on the planet that want a better life--if
our idea that our sympathy for people that want a better life is more
important than our fidelity to the rule of law, then we have sacrificed
the core of the greatness of America because our hearts overruled our
heads.
I am not surprised when Democrats do that. That is what they are in
business to do, is have their hearts overrule their heads; but we can't
let that happen on this side of the aisle, Mr. Speaker, not even--not
even--for someone who came into the United States illegally,
misrepresented themselves to get into the United States military, put
on a uniform, took an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the
Constitution of the United States and maybe, just maybe, risked their
life in a performance of that duty.
They have already violated our laws, they have already misrepresented
themselves, and they have already defrauded the Department of Defense.
Any bill that might be attached to a National Defense Authorization
Act or comes to this floor in any form that rewards someone who has
defrauded the Department of Defense or the United States--whether or
not they have taken an oath to uphold the Constitution, it is a false
oath because they have given their false word--any bill like that needs
to be met with the full rejection of the full vigor of the rule of law
here in the floor of the United States Congress.
That includes those things that are coming out now in the press
today. We don't need to have an intense fight over immigration. We have
an election coming up in November.
We have taken an oath to uphold the Constitution and have defended
it, generally, from this side of the aisle and not exclusively, Mr.
Speaker.
We have an obligation to defend that rule of law, preserve the
sovereignty of America, and refuse to reward lawbreakers. If we reward
lawbreakers, we get more lawbreakers. We need fewer lawbreakers, not
more.
I will defend my oath to this Constitution and the rule of law, and I
will encourage and challenge all of my colleagues to do the same.
____________________