[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 116 (Wednesday, July 23, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H6663-H6664]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BLAME BARACK OBAMA CAUCUS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Jeffries) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JEFFRIES. Madam Speaker, we have a humanitarian crisis at our
border that challenges the capacity of the United States of America to
address it from both a resource perspective and from a compassionate
perspective.
Tens of thousands of unaccompanied minors are seeking entry into this
country, children who are fleeing extreme violence in the northern
triangle countries of Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala.
Now, there are some in this institution who want to lay blame for
this crisis at the feet of the Obama administration. This is not a
surprising development because these individuals are members of the BBO
caucus, the blame Barack Obama caucus.
Whenever anything happens in this country or in this world, they want
to blame the President of the United States. Something goes wrong in
Iraq, a war that was prosecuted, that was botched, that was mismanaged
by the previous administration, the BBO caucus blames Barack Obama.
So we are seeing a similar phenomenon as it relates to this
humanitarian crisis. First, they claim it was brought about by the
President's decision related to deferred action connected to
individuals falling into the DREAMer category.
{time} 1045
But they failed to note that in order to be eligible for deferred
action, you have to be in this country continuously since 2007. That
claim has no basis in reality.
Then they say, well, the President refuses to enforce our Nation's
immigration laws. How silly is that argument? Hundreds of thousands of
individuals have been deported by the Obama administration each and
every year in
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record numbers, particularly when compared to the previous Republican
President. The unenforcement argument has no basis in reality.
Then, lastly, they say, well, this has to do with comprehensive
immigration reform. Comprehensive immigration reform is not the law of
the land. The bill was passed by the Senate. It hasn't even been acted
upon by the House, let alone sent to the President for his signature.
And even if a pathway toward citizenship were created, if you look at
the legislation, only individuals in this country since December of
2011 would be eligible.
Yet the blame Barack Obama caucus doesn't care about the facts. Well,
here are the facts. The individuals, the children who are fleeing and
who are coming to this country, are trying to escape extreme violence,
gang activity, drug trafficking, sexual abuse, and intimidation. The
Northern Triangle countries of Central America--El Salvador, Guatemala,
and Honduras--are among the most violent in the world. Honduras is the
murder capital of the world--number one. El Salvador is number four,
and Guatemala is number five.
How do we know that this phenomenon is not simply Uncle Sam throwing
his hands up saying come into our country? Well, here is another
reason. All of the Central American neighbors to our south outside of
these Northern Triangle countries have also experienced an exponential
increase in unaccompanied minors. Mexico, Belize, Panama, Costa Rica,
and Nicaragua have all experienced significant increases in children
coming to those countries, more than a 400 percent increase
collectively in asylum applications in 2012.
This is not a pull from the United States. These children are running
for their lives. And so we have got to address it with an understanding
of what is the root cause of the humanitarian crisis.
Several of us on the Judiciary Committee have introduced the
Vulnerable Immigrant Voice Act because we believe that the
unaccompanied children should have access to counsel. It would benefit
the taxpayer in making immigration proceedings more efficient and
ensuring expedited removal when merited and in making sure that
unnecessary detention doesn't take place.
Now, many of these children will not have a valid legal basis to
remain, but some will. Some will have asylum claims, U visa, or Special
Immigrant Juvenile Status, and for that reason we should give them
access to counsel and do what is right for these children.
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