[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 171 (Thursday, November 19, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8146-S8148]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PRESIDENT'S REFUGEE RESETTLEMENT PLAN
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I appreciate very much the remarks of
Senator Portman. I think he is touching on some critically important
issues that all of us need to fully understand. As always, his insights
are valuable and worthy of serious consideration by all.
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I would also briefly note that I do believe--and I spoke about this
several weeks ago--there is a need for this country, as Senator Casey
noted, to develop a bipartisan strategy, particularly with regard to
how we deal with the rising spasm of extremism in the Middle East. It
is a fact. It is happening. We as a country have to be able to work
together in a bipartisan way to decide what action we may choose to
use--whether it is military force, whether it is technological
advancement, whether it is working with allies--to do whatever we can
to increase more stability, more peace and tranquility, and less
terrorism and violence. It is a big matter, and I am not at all
confident that we have a strategy. In fact, we don't have a strategy
that anyone can recognize as effective in this region, as a number of
witnesses before the Armed Services Committee have testified, including
former Secretary of Defense Bob Gates, who served under both President
Bush and President Obama.
This President seems to have his own plan. He refuses to listen. As
he traveled around the world recently talking about the attacks in
Paris, I think it stunned our allies. This is not a healthy situation.
There are millions of refugees. Good leadership, responsible
leadership, should have anticipated this danger, and when it developed,
have a sound strategy that deals with it in a humane way. It cannot be
the strategy of the United States and Europe that when instability
occurs anywhere in the world, when instability occurs in Syria or other
places in the Middle East, the solution is for everybody to come to
Europe or the United States. This is not healthy for those countries,
it is not part of the historical tradition, and for reasons I am going
to touch on, it is very bad policy.
I think Senator Portman is correct that we are not where we need to
be militarily, strategically, and in other ways, to help bring about a
situation in which people can return to their homes and be with their
families and not have to be running all over the world, marching
through Europe, not knowing where they are going to go, in countries
that will not and cannot support them. It is not sound policy.
I want to address the economic and security threats imposed by the
President's refugee resettlement plan and talk about it in some detail
and explain why the more effective and compassionate solution is to
resettle the region's refugees in safe zones in the region rather than
flying them into the United States or Europe or other places around the
globe.
Each and every year, the United States issues green cards to roughly
1 million immigrants. We admit approximately 500,000 foreign students.
We distribute work visas to approximately 700,000 foreign workers and
grant approximately 25,000 requests for asylum. Asylum is when a person
arrives in our country and says: I can't go home because I will be in
danger. A refugee is when somebody is in a foreign country--not their
own country--and comes to our Embassy or to the UN and says: I am
threatened here. I am not safe. I want to be a refugee and go
elsewhere. If they are accepted, they are a refugee. If the others are
accepted after they come to our country--perhaps illegally--they are
asylees. We have brought in another 70,000 refugees on top of that each
year in recent years.
The fact is, refugees are among the most costly immigration programs
for several reasons. Refugees are instantly eligible for all Federal
welfare and entitlement programs. Most are low-skilled and frequently
lack any formal education and many--most don't speak English.
There is great cost involved in this. One estimate from an expert is
that for every 10,000 refugees admitted, there will be a lifetime cost
to the U.S. Treasury of $6.5 billion. This year, we are now going to
accept 85,000. The President says he will accept 100,000 next year and
maybe more. Now, 100,000 is 10 times $6.5 billion added to the debt of
the country, because no extra money is being appropriated for Medicaid
and for food stamps. The money is going to be added to the debt. It is
not healthy. It is very expensive.
There are enormous security concerns as well. We have seen a number
of refugees implicated in terrorist activity inside the United States.
We wish it weren't so, but it is a fact. Yet, in this environment of
increasing Federal debt, wage stagnation driven by excess labor supply,
and ISIS terrorists trying to infiltrate as refugees, President Obama
has announced a unilateral expansion of the refugee program to begin
admitting many more Syrian refugees. This is at a time when 83 percent
of the voters say projected growth in immigration should be curbed,
according to Pew polling.
The President persists in his plan even though his own officials,
testifying before the Subcommittee on Immigration and the National
Interest, conceded there is no database in Syria with which to vet
refugees.
The administration briefed us last night, and they publicly stated:
We are going to use biometric techniques. In the United Sates, what
does that mean? It means they take your fingerprint and run it against
the NCIC--National Crime Information Center--and see if you have
warrants for your arrest or if you have been convicted of anything. You
can't do that in Syria. You can take their fingerprints, but there is
no database to run it against. So that is just puffing. That is spin.
You can't run fingerprints in Syria, because there is no database to
run them against. As his officials further concluded, there is no way
to prevent refugees from radicalizing after their entrance into the
United States, as has happened, unfortunately, with Somali refugees.
It is an unpleasant but unavoidable fact that bringing in large
unassimilated flows of migrants from the Muslim world creates the
conditions possible for radicalization and extremism to take hold. This
is what they are seeing in Europe.
The FBI Director tells us there are now active ISIS investigations in
all 50 States. They have a terrorist investigation involving ISIS in
every State in the Union today. I think there are 900 open cases.
Our subcommittee has identified dozens of examples of foreign-born
immigrants committing and attempting to commit acts of terror on U.S.
soil. It is happening every day. Preventing and responding to these
acts is an effort encompassing thousands of Federal agents, attorneys,
and prosecutors and billions of dollars in costs. They are directing
their efforts away from bank fraud and Medicare fraud and toward
watching terrorists. Their ability has been limited by restrictions on
their ability to conduct surveillance. In effect, we are voluntarily
admitting individuals at risk for terrorism and then on the back end
trying to stop them from carrying out bad, violent designs.
The former head of the Citizenship and Immigration Services union,
which represents immigration workers who handle the casework on these
evaluations for admission, issued this warning more than a year ago.
This is important. This is the man who represents the individuals who
do the work every day, and he got frustrated and he told the truth.
This is what he said:
It is also essential to warn the public about the threat
that ISIS will exploit our loose and lax visa policies to
gain entry to the United States.
Indeed, as we know from the first World Trade Center
bombing in 1993, from the 9/11 terrorist attacks, from the
Boston Bombing, from the recent plot to bomb a school and
courthouse in Connecticut, and many other lesser-known terror
incidents, we are letting terrorists into the United States
right through our front door. . . . Applications for entry
are rubber-stamped, the result of grading agents by speed
rather than discretion. We've become the visa clearinghouse
for the world.
We can't properly vet the people coming now. Yet we are still talking
about adding more and more people to it.
Senator Cruz and I sent the administration a list of 72 individuals
charged with or convicted of terrorism-related offenses in just the
last year. We wanted to know something. We asked for the immigration
histories of each one of these individuals. Isn't that a good thing to
know? We are policymakers. We are supposed to decide how to conduct
immigration issues. As we evaluate how to improve our immigration
situation, shouldn't we know how these terrorists--who have been
arrested, charged, or convicted--got into the country?
Well, stunningly, the administration has just refused to respond.
They didn't
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respond because they don't want the public to know. They think if they
can ignore these requests, then people will not know and will not begin
to question how things are being conducted. Congress should not
acquiesce to the President's refugee funding request when he refuses to
even publicly disclose the immigration history of these 72 terrorists,
many of whom are involved with and directly connected with Al Qaeda and
ISIS.
An outright majority of the public opposes resettling Syrian refugees
in the United States. In fact, voters across all parties wish to see a
reduction of Middle Eastern refugee settlements. It is in the data.
That is what people think. They are worried about this issue. Why
shouldn't they be? We have had our own problems. We have had 9/11, we
have had the Boston bombers, and many other instances, such as
Chattanooga, and look at what is happening in Europe. I don't think the
American people are mean or unkind. They are just rightly concerned.
They want to protect their families, their Nation, and their interests,
and I think we should consider their concerns.
The safe and proper course is to focus on regional resettlement. One
report says that for the price of placing one refugee in the United
States, 12 can be helped in their homeland. Our goal must be to help
refugees find safety and help them return to their homes, not for us to
depopulate the region.
How serious is this? Only this strategy will protect the security of
the United States and the West, protect the finances of our country
from further debt, and protect the long-term stability and safety of
the Middle East itself. That is what our goal should be, and our
President is not focused on this issue. It has been raised in committee
after committee and nothing has been accomplished. He just sticks with
the plan he has.
What then is Congress to do to stop the President from carrying out a
plan the voters oppose and Congress has not approved? The answer lies
in the power of the purse. Each and every year the President submits a
request to Congress to fund his Refugee Admissions Program. Only with
these funds can the President carry out his plans. Congress, which has
been run over time and again by this President, must not write the
blank check the President is asking for. He can also bring in more
refugees than he has currently indicated. Secretary Kerry has told the
Judiciary Committees of the House and Senate they just may well bring
in more than this.
My colleague Senator Shelby and I outlined in a joint statement that
the answer is for Congress to include in the year-end funding bill a
clear requirement that the President must submit his annual refugee
plan to Congress for approval. Senator Shelby is on that Appropriations
Committee. Under this plan, Congress must approve how many refugees are
brought in and from where.
Mr. President, is it time to wrap up?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I thank the Chair and ask for 1
additional minute to wrap up.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, we are facing a humanitarian crisis of
monumental proportions. In large part, it is because the President has
mismanaged the situation in Syria. He is the Chief Executive, he is the
Commander in Chief, the military does what he says, and this has not
been good. It just has not been good. It has caused danger, it has
caused innocent people to be killed, it has caused people to have to
flee, and it has also allowed the surge of ISIS and Al Qaeda-type
terrorist organizations in Syria to be able to create an entire state
of their own and to export their terrorism.
We have to create safe zones in Syria and other places in the region
where people can stay in their homes, and we need to work to end this
fighting as soon as possible so people can go back home permanently. It
cannot be the position of this country that we just bring in millions
of people because of the dangers abroad. It just does not make common
sense.
I thank the Chair and yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, as my colleague from Alabama prepares to
leave, I want to wish him and his family a happy Thanksgiving holiday
and I look forward to seeing him in 10 days.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, Senator Carper is one of our most
delightful colleagues. He is always gentlemanly and calls us to
consider and think on the higher things. I thank my friend from
Delaware for that and his service.
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