[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 148 (Wednesday, September 13, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H7319-H7320]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DACA STORIES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, last week on the east front outside the
Capitol on the lawn, I met with a group of DREAMers. DREAMers, of
course, refers to young Americans who were brought here as children
without proper documentation, but who have grown up in our communities,
studied in our schools, and are American in every way but on paper.
The DREAMers I met with, Mr. Speaker, were fasting--fasting to
protest the President's destructive decision to end the DACA program
that allowed them to register to live and work in the only country they
consider to be theirs. They were fasting to encourage us in this House
to take action to remedy their situation by enacting a permanent fix,
as President Trump has suggested.
One of the young DREAMers, Mr. Speaker, I met was a young man named
Diego. He is 28. Born in Mexico, he came here as a young child and was
raised in Arkansas. He didn't make a decision to come here. He was
brought here by his parents.
Thanks to DACA, he was able to get a job, a driver's license, and pay
taxes to support the country he loves. Diego
[[Page H7320]]
is now a graduate of the University of Arkansas, and a Public Policy
Fellow with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute. How stupid it
would be to send him to some other country that he does not know.
I also met Karen from Florida, age 22. She also was brought here from
Mexico at a very young age. Now she attends college and owns a small
business.
There was Fernanda from Alabama. She is 23 and graduated from a 4-
year university with honors, thanks to the scholarships she could apply
for once registered under DACA. How stupid it would be to say to her:
Leave.
There is Brandon, age 19. He told me that he has a younger sister who
was born here. He, of course, does not want to be separated from her as
a result of being deported.
What kind of a judgment is it that we would divide a sister and a
brother, particularly a brother who has made such a positive impact on
his community?
Mr. Speaker, this issue is about real people. Real people. They are
Americans in mind and in spirit because they grew up here, they love
this country, and they contribute to building our communities and
Nation every day. Let's not forget that.
That is why so many thousands of businesses and major business groups
in America have said: Keep DACA in place. That is why the President
said: Fix this, and I will sign the bill. That is why so many churches
and communities and educators and medical personnel have said: Keep
these folks here. They are making a positive difference for America.
Mr. Speaker, I urge the Speaker and the majority leader to bring a
bill to this floor that will do what President Trump says we ought to
do and put DACA in legislation. Pass the Dream Act. We are going to
have an opportunity to do that at the end of this month, next month,
and hopefully we will get that done.
Let's pass this bipartisan, bicameral Dream Act without delay so that
Diego, Karen, Fernanda, Brandon, and so many thousands more who see
America as their country, who are making a positive contribution to
their country, can stay here. They know of no other home than America,
and they want to be a part of building this country's future.
Mr. Speaker, immigrants have always made that contribution. It is
immigrants who built this country. My father came here at the age of 32
in 1934. He came from Denmark. I am the son of an immigrant, born here
in America. He served in World War II and became a citizen through his
service in World War II.
I rarely quote Rush Limbaugh. He said: We are not going to send these
kids home. Eighty-four percent of the American people, in that
neighborhood, believe that we ought not to send these kids back to the
countries of their birth, which are not their home. That is bad policy.
Let's listen. Let's act. Let's make the lives of these young people
more secure and more productive for America.
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