[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 101 (Thursday, June 23, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4541-S4543]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UNITED STATES V. TEXAS SUPREME COURT DECISION
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, today the Supreme Court, in the case of
the United States v. Texas, rendered an interim victory for the rule of
law in America. It is a victory for the constitutional process by which
Congress passes laws, and the President faithfully executes those laws.
He has taken an oath to do that. He is the chief law enforcement
officer in America, and Congress is the body that passes and makes
laws. We have immigration laws, most of which have been on the books
for many years. They reflect the decided view of the government and
people of the United States of America. Those laws must be enforced in
an effective and consistent way.
The decision that was made today means that the injunction issued
below stands, at least on an interim basis. In other words, an order
was issued by the lower court to block the President of the United
States from carrying out a series of actions that he wants to carry
out, but could not because he lacks the authority. It is a huge,
significant constitutional matter.
If you remember, colleagues, it wasn't too long ago that we had a
national debate and vote about reforming immigration laws in the United
States. I believe that was not a good reform. We debated it and it
failed in the Congress. It did not get the support of both Houses,
although it did get the support of the Senate. The proposal failed. The
American people spoke clearly on it. They contacted us in large
numbers.
People began to understand that the bill would not be effective in
doing what it promised to do; that is, to end the illegality. It was
going to be effective in granting amnesty to virtually everybody
unlawfully in the country today, but it would not have been able to
carry out an effective and lawful system for the future. That is what I
believe. I was a Federal prosecutor for 15 years. We tried to read the
law and make sure it was effective; but this law was not effective.
So the President just decided: ``I am going to use my pen and I am
going to issue orders to all of the executive departments and agencies
that are obliged to enforce the laws of the United States and I am
going to tell them to do what the Congress rejected. I am going to
execute an amnesty by the signing of my pen that legalizes everyone in
the country here today.''
It is an unbelievable overreach, a matter of tremendous import, and
it is an affront to the legislative process. It is an affront to the
majority of the American people who want a lawful system of
immigration--one that serves their interests, serves the interest of
America, the national interest, not some special interest that wants
cheaper labor, and not some political interest that is looking for
votes--but what is the policy that best serves the American people.
That is what this issue is all about.
The Supreme Court, by a 4-to-4 vote, concluded that the injunction
should remain; that is, they blocked the President, at least on the
portion of the Executive orders that were before the Court. He has done
some other things that were not before the Court, and I think would be
at risk, too, if properly challenged, but they haven't made it to the
Court yet.
If my colleagues remember, the judge heard the case and issued an
injunction, blocking the President from going forward with his own plan
for immigration and one that Congress had rejected. Then the United
States Court of Appeals ruled that the judge was correct, and now, by a
4-to-4 vote, the ruling of the Fifth Circuit has been upheld.
In November of 2014, the Obama administration went on strike. It just
announced: ``We are not going to follow the requirements and the laws
of the United States with regard to immigration.''
President Obama said: ``I am going to direct my offices to carry out
a policy that I think should be the national policy. I am sorry
Congress didn't pass it, and the historic law remains in place, but I
am going to direct my officers not to do it.''
That is what he did. In effect, it was a seizing of the enforcement
of immigration law in so many key ways. Under the guise of what he
called exercising prosecutorial discretion, his orders directed law
enforcement officers not to enforce plain law, forcing them to violate
their oath of office to support and defend the Constitution of the
United States and his own oath, which is to see that the laws are
faithfully executed. In so doing, he effectively eliminated entire
sections in the United States Code.
Not only did President Obama direct his officers and agents, all of
whom are in the executive branch under his supervision as the President
of the United States--the Chief Executive--he ordered those agencies of
the Department of Homeland Security not to follow the plain law. He
further decreed that those who came here illegally and had children in
the United States would be allowed to stay in the United States and be
granted work permits and access to certain Federal benefits--people who
entered the country unlawfully.
No wonder Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have such low
morale.
An objective Federal study that is done every year or periodically
evaluates the morale of the Federal officers in the United States
found, I think again this year, that the morale of the Department of
Homeland Security is the lowest of any Federal agency. Why is this?
Because they have been ordered not to do their duty. They put their
lives on the lines in dangerous circumstances, and they arrest people,
they bring them in, and what happens? They are not deported. They are
released on bail or some sort of promise to appear, and they go into
the country as they planned to do all along.
This is extremely discouraging for our officers and agents. It is
wrong, it should not happen, and it is a cause of the increasing number
of illegal immigrants we have in the Nation today.
In fact, I say to my colleagues, a few years ago, the Immigration and
Customs Enforcement Officers Association filed a lawsuit against
Secretary Janet Napolitano and John Morton--their supervisors--and said
that you are ordering us to violate our oath to enforce the law. I have
never seen a lawsuit like this, thousands of officers suing their
supervisors for ordering them not to do their duty. This is wrong. It
lowers morale.
When you have that kind of situation, what message does it send to
the world? It sends a message to the world that if you can get into the
United States, you are going to be successful, you can stay here, and
you don't have to come according to the procedures in law. We have seen
an increase in lawlessness in recent years. In fact, it looks like this
year, among a number of categories, we have already reached the same
level of arrests we did in all of last fiscal year. So we are having a
rather significant increase again this year.
Well, what happened? Over half the States in the United States filed
a lawsuit in Federal court. Judge Andrew Hanen in the United States
District Court for the Southern District of Texas, heard the case. It
went on for a considerable amount of time. The Department of Justice
defended President Obama's actions. So the top lawyers in the U.S.
Department of Justice went to Texas, they defended the administration,
and they were opposed by more than half of the States. Judge Hanen
heard the case and he issued an injunction. He said: Mr. President, you
are changing the regulations of the United States that have been issued
pursuant to the Immigration and Nationality Act. You are changing
those, and before you can change regulations, you have to be able to go
through a process. You have to have notice and opportunity for people
to be heard and objections to be made before the regulations can be
altered. That was basically the decision he rendered.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upheld the
injunction, and today's decision confirms that the Obama
administration's lawless plans may not proceed.
But the fight is far from over. The case will now be sent back to
Judge Hanen for additional litigation on the
[[Page S4542]]
merits, and the ultimate outcome remains uncertain.
To issue a stay and block a Federal agency from going forward with a
rule or regulation, a Federal court must find that the opposition
litigants have a substantial likelihood of prevailing on the merits. I
think this decision indicates Judge Hanen, the Fifth Circuit, and even
the Supreme Court believe it is likely the States would prevail on the
merits of their challenge.
What is clear, as highlighted by the egregious, unethical conduct of
the lawyers of the U.S. Department of Justice, is that the Obama
administration will stop at nothing to advance its agenda. I worked at
the Department of Justice for almost 15 years--and we worked our hearts
out to always be faithful and operate with integrity before the Federal
judges, and always, since we were representatives of the United States
of America, made sure every representation we made to the Court was
accurate and had a high standard. Most assistant U.S. attorneys and
Department of Justice lawyers should know that and adhere to that at
the highest level. Other lawyers frequently don't, private attorneys
don't, but the Federal attorneys representing the people of the United
States of America have that high duty.
Well, what happened? Judge Hanen found that the administration was
determined to go forward with these unlawful actions, even though he
had ordered them to stop, and they appeared to cause some substantial
violation of the integrity of their Department. I believe they are
going to have a further hearing soon on whether there will be
additional penalties. He already imposed a penalty on the Department of
Justice lawyers for their improper conduct, for which he severely
condemned them.
The message this administration is sending to the world is that if
you can get here, you can stay here.
According to official statistics from U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, the number of so-called family units who have been
apprehended at the southern border has already exceeded the number who
were apprehended in all of fiscal year 2015. Approximately, 12 percent
more so-called family units were apprehended through May than were
apprehended through all of last year. Total apprehensions of all aliens
appear to be on the rise, which is an indice of increased illegality
into this country.
Last month, the head of the National Border Patrol Council testified
before the Subcommittee on Immigration and the National Interest, which
I chair, that for every alien apprehended at the border by the U.S.
Border Patrol, we could assume at least one evaded detection. He said
they are catching half of the people who enter, and they apprehended
more than 300,000 illegally into the country last year.
He further testified--this is important, critically important and
shows the extreme nature of the Obama administration's policies with
regard to immigration--that of the half who are apprehended, at least
80 percent of those are released into the country and not deported.
They are told: OK. Come back to court. Sometimes they have a bail,
sometimes they don't.
At another hearing, a Federal agency official testified that they
take young people to their destination city when they are apprehended.
What does that mean? It means that if somebody enters the country and
they are 17 years of age and they don't know what to do with them,
instead of deporting them and sending them back at that time, they say:
Where did you intend to go? Well, my destination was Chicago. So the
Federal Government takes them to Chicago, turns them over to a cousin
or an uncle or an aunt or whatever. There is no effort to ascertain
whether the person they are turned over to is legally in the country or
not either.
So this is the kind of thing that is causing such disturbance within
the law enforcement field, and that is so discouraging to them.
The extent to which the administration has directed its officers not
to enforce plain law is one of the most brazen acts of legal
disobedience in the history of America. Could the next President refuse
to enforce tax laws? Could the next President say: I don't like this
tax, I believe this tax is too high, or I don't believe we should tax
these entities so he tells his subordinate units, the head of the IRS,
just like he tells the head of Homeland Security, don't enforce this
law. I know that Congress passed it, but I don't think it is a fair
tax. Don't collect it and tell everybody in the country that if you
don't pay that tax, you can be certain the IRS is not going to spend
its time and effort to collect it, so you are home free. That is the
kind of logic we are dealing with.
These unlawful actions fly in the face of what the American people
have asked for. Yet, despite having the Obama Administration having the
most radical immigration policies in our Nation's history, former
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has promised to go even further.
I am astounded at some of the things she has declared. She promises
to deport only those who commit violent felonies or happen to be
terrorists. Anybody else can come in, get in illegally, sell drugs, get
caught for fraud, get caught for fraudulent ID, credit card fraud, and
all those kinds of things, but as long as they are not committing a
violent crime, they never get sent home. They get to stay here. How is
this in harmony with the will of the American people to have a lawful
system of immigration, one that protects their public safety, protects
them from criminal activity, protects them from terrorism and those
kind of things? It is breathtaking to me.
Moreover, if Secretary Clinton is provided with the ability as
President to appoint a new Justice to the Supreme Court, the outcome of
this case might change. Who knows? But it certainly is clear that she
has been vigorously critical of the decision and says it is correct,
essentially. She said this in her statement today: ``Today's decision
by the Supreme Court is purely procedural, casts no doubt on the fact
that DAPA and DACA,'' these amnesty programs, ``are entirely within the
President's legal authority.'' She says this is entirely within the
President's authority.
Well, again, let me remind you what the President did. On the issue
before the Supreme Court, he not only said to 4 million adults that
they will not be deported, he declared that they are able to work. He
has given them work authorization when the laws of the United States
don't allow people illegally here to take jobs. Not only that, he gave
them the right to Social Security. He gives them Social Security
numbers. They will pay into Social Security and be able to get Social
Security, Medicare, and other programs. Basically, he gave illegal
persons established by the laws of the United States the ability to
participate as American citizens on virtually every matter of
importance. It is unacceptable.
Former Secretary Clinton said that she will introduce ``comprehensive
immigration reform with a path to citizenship'' within the first 100
days of her Presidency. In other words, she would give legal status,
citizenship, to everybody who has come into the country illegally. It
is a damaging thing. It has remarkable consequences and impacts on the
legal system, and it also incentivizes more people to come to America.
The American people have every right to demand that our very generous
legal immigration flow be followed according to the law and that it
reflect their wishes. The American people are good and decent people.
They are not asking for anything extreme. What is extreme is this idea
that we systematically refuse to guarantee the laws of the United
States be executed. The actions and policies advanced by President
Obama, and apparently even more radical policies by Secretary Clinton,
are radical things; they are not traditional in any way. They are
directly contrary to our constitutional principles and the clear will
of the American people. They must be stopped.
We have a generous immigration system. We have 1.1 million at least--
I think it may now be even closer to 1.2 million people every year.
That is more than any nation in the world. So it is a remarkable thing
that we do. In addition to that, at any given time there are 700,000
people in the United States, foreign born, who take jobs in the United
States. These are supposed to be temporary jobs for the most part. A
lot of them are basically permanent jobs that can be reupped and
reextended.
[[Page S4543]]
We don't have enough jobs for the American people now. We have a
surplus of labor in this country. If you believe in free markets,
colleagues, that is why, since 1999 until last year, median household
income in America is down $4,000 per family. A big part of that is an
excessive labor flow into the United States. It is not disputable,
colleagues.
Look at the great professor on this, Professor Borjas of Harvard.
Born in Cuba himself, he came here as a young person. Dr. Borjas shows
that an excessive labor flow pulls down wages. Why would it not? It is
a commonsense, free market principle. He documented it through labor
reports, census data, and there is no doubt about it. We are hammering
American working people. Their lives are being diminished while some
make more money because they pay a lower wage.
I am not saying we are going to end immigration. Nobody is talking
about that. But we have extremely high immigration levels legally, and
on top of that we have this massive illegality. So the first thing the
American people have asked us to do is end the illegality, please. They
have been pleading for that for 30 years, and all we have here is some
complaint about any bill that actually takes a step toward that end
getting blocked. We can't even get votes on amendments.
I just want to say that I think the American people are correct. Any
nation state that sees itself as sovereign, sees itself as having a
loyalty to its own people, should protect those people from unfair
policies, should defend their legitimate interests, and we are not
doing it.
We are pulling down wages right now. There are people that don't have
jobs today. We have the lowest percentage of Americans with a job than
we have had in 40 years. Last month we created 38,000 jobs--a paltry,
shockingly low number. It sent some shock waves through the business
community. We need to have close to 200,000 a month. We are bringing in
almost 100,000 immigrants a month.
From 2000 to 2014--14 years--the native born population of the United
States has increased throughout that period by millions. How many jobs
were created and how many jobs did native born Americans get during
that period? None. The actual number of workers from 2000 to 2014 went
down. All jobs that were created during that period of time went to the
foreign born. Is it any surprise that wages have fallen? Is it any
surprise that we have gone from around a low $50,000-a-year median
American income for a family to $4,000 less? It is simple.
Somebody needs to talk about this and defend the legitimate concerns
of families in this country and working Americans.
I want to say a couple more things. The outcome of this Court ruling
is not going to cause any major change in what is happening today; in
fact, we have been living under the policies that the Court ordered for
some time now. It is not going to change. We are not going to have any
mass roundups as people have suggested. That is ridiculous. The
President has ordered, basically, an end to deportation except for
those who commit serious crimes. Secretary Clinton has said the crime
has to be a violent crime or terrorism connected before they get
deported. So we are heading in that direction.
This is not a sound policy for America.
We are going to have to work our way through the many difficulties we
have in the future, but the simple demand we have from the majority of
the people, I believe, is to end the illegality. Do that first, and
then we will talk about what we are going to do next about the people
who have been here for a long time.
A lot of people just came. They just used a fraudulent identification
or drove across the border or they were caught and released on bail and
went to Los Angeles or Chicago or somewhere. Do they get to demand to
be given legal status in America? Do they get to demand to be made a
citizen when other people around the world who have waited for their
time may never get into the United States because they don't qualify?
That is the question we are facing.
I truly believe that we believe in immigration as Americans in this
country. We are always going to have immigration, but the level of it
and the nature of it should be such that we admit people who are most
likely to be successful, to flourish and to benefit America, and not
people who are going to have a hard time, who don't speak English and
don't have skills that we need in this country today. I believe it is
wrong to bring in more workers, particularly with low skills, who
compete directly against Americans who are trying to get a job, pulling
down their wages while making it harder for them to get a job. I think
that is going beyond what the responsibility of the government is.
It is our responsibility to follow the law as it is written, and it
is the President's responsibility under his oath and duties as the
Chief Executive and the chief law enforcement officer in America to see
that our laws are enforced. If he wants to come back again with some
other changes in the law, let him bring it up. Let's talk about it. But
he does not get to do that on his own. I am pleased that the Supreme
Court has stopped him at least with regard to this specific program,
the so-called DAPA program.
I appreciate the opportunity to share these remarks.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Lankford). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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