[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 30, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7045-H7046]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BORDER CRISIS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, over the last couple of weeks, many of
us have visited my home State and have gone to places where I have gone
over the decades of service and living in Texas, and that is to our
great neighbors who live on the border. Many great citizens of the
State of Texas and of the great country in which we live, they have
lived and worked and played, and they have created an economic engine,
cities like Brownsville, Laredo, Harlingen, McAllen, and many others.
And they have, in fact, experienced over the years an influx of
individuals coming to do harm.
As a senior member of the Homeland Security Committee and a member
who has served as chairwoman and ranking member on a number of
subcommittees, we have made great strides.
I am reminded of the low number of Border Patrol agents some many
years ago, and now we are upwards to 25,000 hardworking Americans who
serve on both the northern and southern borders.
They have met the challenge of a serious influx. First, the drug
cartels. The violence on the Mexican side of the border. We have come
together with Mexican Presidents and have worked with the Mexican
national defense forces, and we have quashed, to a certain extent, the
extensive violence. But yet, our Federal agents of the ATF, the DEA,
FBI, and certainly other collaborative efforts have worked to bring
this violence down.
We take note of the fact that El Paso is noted as the safest city in
the United States, and it is on the border. We note that a great deal
of commerce comes through the southern border, as it does the northern
border.
Over the last couple of weeks, beginning maybe in 2013, we saw a new
phenomenon, an unplanned phenomenon, a phenomenon driven by the
devastating and destructive elements found in Honduras, El Salvador,
Guatemala, and Central America, none of which were driven by a pointed
pronouncement from the United States or the President of the United
States, President Barack Obama. But elements who wanted to misuse and
abuse the need for comprehensive immigration reform decided to
misrepresent the laws of the United States of America.
Every Member of Congress has adhered to a particular theme. I started
using it in the 1990s. We are a Nation of laws and a Nation of
immigrants. And the laws are intended to be used to instruct how we
guide our hearts and our laws. We still have the Statue of Liberty in
the harbor of New York that says, we welcome the forlorn and those who
are in need.
Unfortunately, bad information was given to desperate people. Let me
say that again, Mr. Speaker: desperate people. Desperate mothers and
fathers who saw the beheading of young people, or people in their
neighborhood threatened by MS-13 and other horrific gangs who say, if
your child does not join, your child will be killed, or your little
girl will be raped. Or maybe the 3-year-old that I saw down in
Brownsville with a diaper on was given to someone just to save her
life.
That is the misnomer and the abuse that has been going on in the
debate
[[Page H7046]]
here. These are the real lives of children who fled with a more than
credible fear of the loss of life. I am so disappointed sometimes in
how we can reinvent truth, and that is that these children are fleeing
because of what President Obama represented. That is not true. And it
is important to tell the American people the truth.
They were fleeing because of the sheer unbelievable violence, insane
violence, mixed in with the mistruths and misrepresentations of those
who just wanted to make money and abuse the system. So now we have the
surge, maybe 50,000 plus here in the United States. And we have to do
something about it.
I listened to three young people yesterday. Most of us have not heard
from the children because we were protecting the children's privacy.
But these youngsters explained the arduous journey that they took and
how they came here for nothing more than a better life, and that
violence was all around them.
Yes, we need to work with Honduras and Guatemala and El Salvador. But
we started out trying to do what was right. The President offered a
supplemental. He knew it was right to have funding for the wilderness
funding. He knew it was right to give the Border Patrol agents their
appropriate moneys, and he knew it was right for enforcement to add
more judges.
But what I would say is, what we have on the floor now, Mr. Speaker,
is a pitiful example in H.R. 5230. This is a bad emergency
supplemental. It is not even that. It is not worth voting for. America
is better than this, and we need to do better than this with the
supplemental to help these children and help America.
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