[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 30, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7120-H7123]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE CRISIS AT OUR SOUTHERN BORDER
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 the opportunity to be
recognized to address you here on the United States floor of the House
of Representatives in this most deliberative body that we have and are.
I appreciate the comments and the position taken by the gentleman from
Arizona ahead of me. He is one who has lived along the border for a
lifetime. He deals with the issue every day, every week. He is one of
the individuals that I look to to inform me, but also I have taken a
real interest in it myself.
Even though I am from the heart of the heartland, from Iowa, Mr.
Speaker, I have a great appreciation for the Constitution and the rule
of law. Because of that, I have watched as the lawlessness has grown
along our border.
I will say that certainly in all of the time that I have been in this
Congress and in the years building up to it, and less so in the years
prior to that, and I take myself back to 1986 when Ronald Reagan signed
the Amnesty Act of 1986 due to the counsel that he had around him, I
believed at the time that he would veto that bill because of his
reverence for the rule of law would overcome all of the counsel that
came from the House and the Senate and the people around him. Well,
Reagan relented and signed the bill on the promise that we would
legalize roughly a million people in exchange for the enforcement of
the law thereafter and that there would never be another amnesty again
so long as this country would live.
The 1 million became 3 million, and the amnesties that were added to
that in smaller proportions added up to at least 6, perhaps 7, in
addition to the 1986 amnesty. And here we are today, having fought off
this amnesty these years for more than a decade that I have been
directly involved in the immigration policy, and we are on the cusp of
it again.
The President of the United States stood up there in front of you
where you are, Mr. Speaker, and he gave his State of the Union address
here on the floor of the House of Representatives and essentially, and
figuratively, he waved his ink pen at us and he said: Congress, you do
what I tell you on immigration. I want comprehensive immigration
reform. I want you to pass the Senate Gang of Eight amnesty act.
Now I am speaking figuratively, of course, because that is not a
direct quote of the President, but it is certainly the message that the
President delivered: Do what I tell you to do, or I will use my, in one
other setting, his cell phone, or his ink pen, to act in a unilateral--
he didn't say it, but he knows it--unconstitutional fashion.
I can think of another night during the State of the Union address
when our President came here and he spoke right in front of you, Mr.
Speaker, and he pointed down here to the Supreme Court and he lectured
the Supreme Court on what they should do, as if somehow he were article
III, somehow he was the man who commanded the Supreme Court of the
United States. And the camera was looking over at the Justices as the
President lectured them on the Constitution and the rule of law as if
the Chief Justice and the Associate Justices of the United States
Supreme Court needed to get a lesson from an adjunct professor of the
University of Chicago School of Law who taught Constitution law for 10
years in Chicago. He should go to school with every one of those
Justices, Mr. Speaker.
And one of them, the television cameras repeated it over and over
again until they read the lips, and they interpreted his lips to say
``not true, not true.'' That seat that that camera was focused on has
been empty ever since. It has been empty ever since because that
Justice, and I suspect a number of other Justices, decided I am not
going to listen to that again. I am not going to listen to a President
that is out of bounds, a President who believes somehow he can lecture
to the judicial branch of government, that he can lecture to the
judicial branch of government, that he can stand here at this rostrum
as a guest of the House of Representatives and wave his ink pen or
finger at us and announce that we shall do in this Congress what he
commands or he will do so in a unconstitutional fashion. Essentially,
what did the President say? So sue me. The President says: I am going
to do what I am going to do. I know it is lawless, it is
unconstitutional, so sue me.
So today we passed here on the floor of the House of Representatives
a resolution that declares that the House of Representatives has
standing to go before the court to command the President to take care
that the laws be faithfully executed.
We have had multiple hearings before the Judiciary Committee in the
House of Representatives. We have had excellent constitutional scholars
come forward. There hasn't been one who can carry water for the
President's position and hold his own under the scrutiny of the
constitutional lawyers and other scholars that we have on the Judiciary
Committee who take them apart one by one, argument by argument, piece
by piece. And yet the President of the United States persists in
asserting that he can be article I, the legislative branch of
government, the United States Congress, and he can be article III, the
judicial branch of government, and the sole commander of the executive
branch, article II.
He is the Commander in Chief of our Armed Forces. He leads from
behind. He stepped back and followed the French into Libya, and he
waited for the British to go before the House of Commons and vote down
David Cameron's initiative to go into Syria, and then the President of
the United States, following--and leading from behind is the very
definition of following--the President of the United States then offers
to Congress, through trial balloons through the press, that he would
like to have Congress endorse military action in Syria.
Where is our leader? Where is our Commander in Chief? Well, he is off
in the never, never land of advancing administrative amnesty, calling
together his smartest, leftist lawyers that he can find, Mr. Speaker,
and saying to them: Put your think tanks together. You guys go grab the
best brains you can find, attached to the leftist brains you are, and
see if you can come up with a strategic plan that I can grant some
administrative amnesty to the maximum number of people because, Lord
knows, there aren't enough undocumented Democrats in America. We need
more of them. We need an endless supply and endless stream of them. And
where do they come from? Well, they come across our southern border
primarily, although they come in other ways.
{time} 2130
And Democrats in here, when the President says to Congress: Thou
shall pass the bills that I tell you to pass or I am going to use my
pen to unconstitutionally--that is in parentheses, Mr.
[[Page H7121]]
Speaker--enact executive edicts that will do what I want done,
regardless of whether it has the support and the will of the people or
not--we are the support and the will of the people--when the President
said that he is going to enact those immigration unconstitutional
executive edicts, when the President uttered that, I saw a little less
than half of this Chamber rise in a spontaneous standing ovation,
enthusiasm for the President's statement.
It reminds me of the one Democrat who said: I am marching for
abortion rights because my mother didn't have that opportunity. Who
would say that? If your mother didn't have the opportunity to have an
abortion, but you want to march so that you wish she would have, that
means you wish you had never been born. And this Congress with less
than half of it, a bunch of Democrats over here, cheered the President
when he said: I am going to usurp your article I legislative authority,
and I am going to write legislative law with my pen the way I see fit.
And they cheered.
These are the same people that stood here on the floor of the House a
year ago last January and took an oath to preserve, protect, and defend
the Constitution of the United States so help them God. And they say:
Well, we were glad when the President decides he is going to roll over
Congress, roll over the House, roll over the Senate, roll over the
judicial branch by intimidating them into, some say, a decision on
ObamaCare that would not conform with the constitutional directives
that they have.
We are in a mess, Mr. Speaker. We are in a mess, and we have the
President of the United States poised during August, when this Congress
has every year been out of session because our Founding Fathers and our
early, early leaders recognized that Washington, D.C., gets to be a hot
and humid place in the month of August, and you need a little break to
get out of the circle of the Beltway that causes Potomac fever to go
back to your districts so you can look real people in the eye and hear
from them. That has been the tradition of this country.
Some people complain that Members of Congress actually go home. I
would say on the other way around, if we didn't go home we would hear a
lot of complaints. It is important that we go back to our districts and
go out and hear from the people that we have the honor and privilege to
represent, and we will do that, maybe as early as tomorrow, Mr.
Speaker.
But the President is poised to follow through on his threat to issue
the edict, not a lawful act, not a lawful executive order, an edict,
that he would give a lawful status to 5 or 6 million illegal aliens,
many of them, maybe most of them, probably not all of them, criminal
aliens.
He has issued orders to the Department of Justice to examine how they
can get an early release for people who are in our prisons who have
been sentenced. That is hundreds of thousands, as many as 400,000
felons that the President would release on the streets of America. He
has released criminals to the tune of 36,000-plus out onto the streets.
That is in one category. There is another category of tens of thousands
more.
And he has opened up our borders by signing the documents and the
Morton Memos--not physically signed, he had his subordinates do that--
and the Morton Memos say we are not going to enforce a law against
people who didn't commit a felony or aren't guilty of these three
mysterious misdemeanors. And they said that if you came into the United
States illegally, theoretically through no fault of your own, if you
did so before your 18th birthday and you did so before December 31 of
2011, then you get to stay for the duration of this permit that he
manufactures lawlessly out of thin air.
And then he manufactures a work permit so that these people can
compete for jobs against naturalized and natural born American citizens
and green card holders, who likely did it the legal way.
Because he gets a political kick out of this, a political bonus out
of this, because he is bringing in undocumented Democrats, and they
have a plan to document them so they can vote, we have a situation here
where the constitutional underpinnings of America are in crisis mode.
The employment in America is at great risk and under great threat, and
the security of our border is very weak.
I went down, Mr. Speaker, last weekend, down to the southern tip of
Texas, down to the mouth of the Rio Grande, planted a flag right there
at the southern tip where the waters of the Rio Grande flow out into
the sea, and then followed the river to Brownsville and went through
the ports of entry at Brownsville, other facilities in Brownsville, on
up into McAllen and to the ports of entry there, to the border patrol
centers there, to a resettlement center there, and on up all the way to
Laredo.
And from what I saw and what I heard, from our Border Patrol, from
our Customs and Border Protection, from the Department of Public Safety
in Texas, and others, they are good people, a lot of them with uniforms
on, that are doing a good job, doing the best they can with what they
have to work with.
We have a lawless order from the President, DACA, Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals, which is more accurately DACA, Deferred Action for
Criminal Aliens. DACA has become the magnet that the coyotes have used
to advertise throughout the Central American countries, in particular,
El Salvador, Honduras, and also Guatemala. People that are already in
the United States oftentimes will save up money, maybe borrow money,
and send it down to Central America to the tune of, the lowest number
that I pick up is $4,000 a head, on up to 5, 6, 7, 8, maybe even
$9,000, for the coyotes to transport an illegal alien into the United
States.
They are coming into America in the southern tip of Texas and the Rio
Grande Valley sector of the border in numbers that work out this way.
The unaccompanied alien children, UACs as they are known, and referred
to sometimes as ``unaccompanied alien juveniles,'' number this way:
this fiscal year, from October 1 to June 15, 57,000 UACs, unaccompanied
alien children--57,000. That number has surely grown to over 60,000,
probably over 70,000, predicted to go to 90,000 for this fiscal year.
The peak of this thing seems to have passed behind us. We are either
in a temporary lull, or we have seen the peak behind us. But, in any
case, when we think of numbers in the area of 60,000 unaccompanied
alien children coming into the United States, that is only 20 percent
of the overall population coming in. So we are at 300,000 or more. But
of those roughly 60,000--the number that we surpassed--here is how they
break down: 80 percent male, 20 percent female.
The 80 percent male and the 20 percent female also need to take into
account that these are not kids that range from age 1 day to 1 day
before their 18th birthday, Mr. Speaker. These are unaccompanied alien
children that have a demographic breakdown that works like this: 80
percent male, 83 percent that are either the ages of 15, 16, or 17.
Once they are 18, they are no longer qualified as UACs--83 percent.
So I do the simple math, Mr. Speaker, and I say: 0.8, 80 percent,
times 0.83, 83 percent, 15, 16, or 17 years old--that means that 66.4
percent of these unaccompanied alien ``children'' are young men ages
15, 16, and 17 years old. They come from the most violent countries in
the world. The six most violent countries in the world are south of
Mexico. It is not Mexico, it is south of Mexico, Mr. Speaker. Eight of
the 10 most violent countries in the world are also south of Mexico.
It is a fact, according to the United Nation's data, that of the most
violent countries in the world, only Honduras is more violent than the
city of Detroit. Yet, there are those in this Congress that are
convinced, because the Central American countries have a high degree of
violence, that the people are leaving those countries because of the
violence, and they are scared and they are running off. Well, if that
is so, then one would think they would be running out of Detroit at a
pace similar to the pace they are running out of Guatemala and El
Salvador and other violent countries down there--probably run a little
faster out of Honduras than they are out of the other countries, than
they are maybe out of Detroit.
But as I said in a Judiciary Committee hearing, in response to the
witness' testimony that was there, I said: If we are going to bring
these kids to
[[Page H7122]]
the United States because they are afraid where they are, we had better
not take them to Detroit because they will be in more danger there,
unless they came from Honduras. Those are the facts, and those are the
data. Yes, they come from violent countries, and they come from
countries that are controlled to a high degree by drug cartels.
But here is what is happening. The families that are sending people
here usually have one or more members in the United States now. They
may have left their kids back in their home country in Honduras. They
will send money down there, they might borrow money. Then usually
locally they will hire a coyote that is going to smuggle them up into
the United States.
Then the family most often, not 100 percent of the time, but most
often, whoever is in custody of this young girl that might be 12 or 13
or 14, or on up to 17 or older, they go down to the local pharmacy,
where a prescription is not required, and they buy a monthly supply of
contraceptives, birth control bills, and they take it back and they
start giving those birth control pills to that girl, and then send her
across 2,000 to 2,500 miles of dangerous Central America and Mexico to
get on the train of death--it is called ``The Beast,'' and ride that
train up as near the Rio Grande as possible. Then that child has to get
off of there and make their way to the Rio Grande River, then pay a
coyote to get a ride across the river, and then submit themselves to
the U.S. authorities.
We went to center after center, we talked to people after people that
had been working with these unaccompanied alien children, and we asked
them how many of them are sexually assaulted, how many of them are
raped? And the answers came back a guess, but a range, a range between
30 percent and 70 percent.
Think of it, Mr. Speaker. Think of having a daughter and living in El
Salvador and deciding, I want to send her to her mother in the United
States or her aunt in the United States, or being an aunt in El
Salvador and you want to send your niece to her mother in the United
States. You get a wire that sends you down $5,000 or $6,000, and you go
out into the neighborhood and you solicit a coyote, and then you say, I
want to send this niece or my daughter up to America, but why don't you
wait a few days because I have got to go down and buy some birth
control pills and make sure she is ready for the trip, because I am
pretty confident she is going to be raped along the way.
That is what is going on, Mr. Speaker. It is not going on now and
then; it is going on from a third to 70 percent of the time for the
girls, and they told us that the numbers of boys were equivalent to the
numbers of girls who were sexually assaulted. That was a question that
was repeated over and over again.
So this President has done real damage and destruction to the rule of
law. The result of that is America is flooded with illiterate,
unskilled people into the job categories where we have the highest
available employment, the highest ratios of unemployment. The double-
digit unemployment exists in the lowest-skilled jobs. There is no
metric out there that suggests that we should be bringing more
unskilled people in, more people who are illiterate in their own
language into America, thinking somehow that that is work that
Americans won't do.
Nuts. There is no work that Americans won't do. There has been no
work that I won't do. I have done some of the toughest, nastiest, most
difficulty, and some of the dangerous jobs that the country has to
offer, and I haven't come close to doing the jobs that the United
States Marine Corps does on a regular basis.
What is the most dangerous job that we ask an American to do? How
about rooting terrorists out of places like Fallujah? How about taking
on radical al Qaeda extremists in places like Afghanistan?
When the Marine Corps goes into Fallujah for the first or second
battle, and we have seen what has happened since then, what do they get
paid to put their lives on the line? If you figure it at 40 hours a
week, something like $8.49 an hour, Mr. Speaker. That is back then when
I calculated it, when we had operations going on then. If you can pay a
United States marine $8.49 an hour to lock and load and go into a place
like Fallujah, you can't convince me that there is work that Americans
won't do, especially if it pays an appropriate wage and we respect the
work that gets done.
So we have a President who has decided he is going to defy the rule
of law, and he is going to manufacture law as he goes and create work
permits out of thin air.
{time} 2145
When we see this calamity of the huge hole in our southern border,
primarily at McAllen, Texas, the House of Representatives decides it
wants to overreact to the President of the United States, and since
they are afraid that they will somehow get the blame if nothing gets
done in the month of August, they decided to bring a piece of
legislation here to the floor.
This piece of legislation was written by a staff person that was once
that of John McCain, and we know what he has brought for immigration
policy. It has been very troubling to me to deal with the legislation
that he has supported, but I have this in my hand here on the floor,
Mr. Speaker.
It doesn't do what it is advertised to do. It doesn't do what needs
to be done, but it grants this. If there is an unaccompanied alien
child, here are the consequences for failure to appear to a hearing:
Any alien who fails to appear at a proceeding required
under this section, shall be ordered removed in absentia if
the government establishes by a preponderance of the evidence
that the alien was at fault for their absence from the
proceedings.
No evidence can be admitted into that proceeding after the fact, and
it can't be admitted if they don't anticipate that there is not going
to be an appearance of the alien, so that means the government has to
prove by a preponderance of the evidence that it was the alien's fault
they didn't show up.
The only way I know that you can do that is if you have a video
camera on them, and they are sitting on the couch, Mr. Speaker. This is
a wide open hole that grants a pass under that provision. Then it says:
In General--at the conclusion of a proceeding under this
section, the immigration judge shall determine whether an
unaccompanied alien child is likely to be admissible to the
United States.
They get a new hearing under a new section created, which is 235, and
if the preponderance of the evidence indicates that they might receive
asylum and if they think they are likely to receive asylum in a
separate category, then 50 percent plus 1 is preponderance--likely is
50 percent plus 1. Fifty percent of 50 percent is 25 percent, plus one,
are the odds that they need to claim in order to receive a hearing for
asylum.
So if you have got a one in four shot at it, Mr. Speaker, you are
going to get a hearing for asylum. Then you are going to get an asylum
hearing, and then if you are turned down at the asylum hearing, you get
to go to a removal hearing. That is three bites at the apple. They are
all renewable; times two, that is six different bites at the apple.
No such thing exists for Mexican unaccompanied alien children. The
determination is made under the Wilberforce law of 2008 by the Border
Patrol whether or not they go back to Mexico.
They purport that this bill treats the other than Mexican
unaccompanied alien children the same as the existing law treats
unaccompanied alien Mexican children. Mr. Speaker, if it does, there is
language in here that then diminishes our ability to send the Mexican
kids back. That is what we have. We have a bill that has been whipped
to be something that it is not.
I offered an amendment to the Rules Committee tonight. There was a
long discussion and debate over it, Mr. Speaker, but here is what we
have: my amendment said that we have got to fix the 2008 William
Wilberforce language.
By the way, no Republican voted for that, not one. It was introduced
on December 9, 2008. It was taken up by a unanimous consent request
after everybody left town on December 10, 2008. It was passed by voice
in the House, sent to the Senate. The Senate caught the lateral and
passed it by voice to the President.
We didn't see that bill. It became a component of what they have
utilized as an open door; coupling the 2008 bill
[[Page H7123]]
with an expansive reading of the asylum language and the President's
DACA language is what is bringing these tens of thousands of
unaccompanied alien minors here, which are only 20 percent of the
overall group that are coming.
There are also family units--usually, mothers with a child or
children. There are individual males coming in, in significant numbers.
I have said that we have imported at least 40,000 15-year-old, 16-year-
old, and 17-year-old boys--prime gang recruitment age--and that doesn't
give you the data on those that are 18, 19, 20, 25 to 31; and those are
just the ones that are covered under DACA.
I offered an amendment that would have cut off all funding to DACA.
It mirrors the Cruz-Blackburn language. It is good language, and it
should be part of this bill. It is not, by the information I have, Mr.
Speaker.
There is a 2008 fix that I wrote over a month ago that needs to be
part of this bill. It is not, by the report I am getting from the Rules
Committee, Mr. Speaker. I don't know that there was even a vote on it
up in the Rules Committee.
There is asylum language that has been offered by the chairman of the
Judiciary Committee, Bob Goodlatte, that fixes some of the expansive
utilization of asylum that is allowing for people to be distributed all
over the United States at taxpayers' expense. That is not part of this
bill, Mr. Speaker.
We don't have a deliberative process in this Congress because they
are not going to allow a legitimate vote, and the language that is out
here is bad.
Mr. Speaker, I will vote ``no'' on this bill that has come before us,
and I am going to have to consider what I do on the rule, but if this
House sends a message to support cutting off all funding to enforce or
implement DACA, that will be constructive because it will say to the
President: these are the Republicans that have at least a chance of
standing up against you if you decide that you are going to function in
a lawless, unconstitutional manner in the month of August--or any other
month--with regard to this granting any expansion of the lawlessness
that we have seen today.
Mr. Speaker, with that, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________