[Congressional Record Volume 164, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 18, 2018)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5045-S5048]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--S. 3227
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, this
moment hardly seems the time for the Senate to engage in debating
rhetorical phrases of praise for the Immigration and Customs
Enforcement agency when that agency--better known as ICE--is deeply
mired in the scandal of separating children from their parents. It is
ICE that partnered with Border Patrol and Health and Human Services in
this diabolical situation. It is ICE that holds the parents in
detention camps. It is ICE that has failed to arrange for the knowledge
within the system of which parents go with which children. It is ICE
that often has prevented individuals from having access to counsel,
from being able to even phone their children, and charged them for
using the phone.
In this situation, some 2,500-plus kids have been torn out of the
arms of their parents, and this particular resolution would engage in
nice phrases of praise instead of addressing itself to solving the
problem.
We should right now be considering Senator Harris's act, the REUNITE
Act, which would accelerate the reunification of the children, would
ensure that family separation never happens again, would coordinate
actions between ICE and the Border Patrol and Health and Human
Services, and would set up a family case management system that worked,
according to the IG of Homeland Security, to deliver 100 percent of the
time when individuals had a date for a hearing--100 percent of the
time.
That is why I ask my colleague to modify his request so that the
Committee on the Judiciary, instead, be discharged from further
consideration of S. 3227, the REUNITE Act, and the Senate proceed to
its immediate consideration; that the bill be considered read a third
time and passed and the motion to reconsider be considered made and
laid upon the table with no intervening action or debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Will the Senator from Montana so modify his
request?
Mr. DAINES. I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Is there objection to the original request?
The Senator from Oregon.
Mr. MERKLEY. I strongly object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The Senator from Montana.
Mr. DAINES. Mr. President, I live in a State--the State of Montana--
that has a northern border. ICE agents keep our border secure, and I
want to thank them for the very important work they are doing.
Far too many people are coming into our country illegally and putting
the safety and security of American citizens at risk. In fact, in
Montana, the effects of unsecured borders are very personal. All across
our State, communities at this moment are torn apart by the meth and
opioids that are trafficked through the southern border. In fact, just
last year, ICE seized nearly 50 tons of narcotics, nearly a million
pounds of heroin, fentanyl, and other deadly drugs that criminals and
cartels are smuggling into our country.
At a time when America is suffering from a drug epidemic, how many
more lives would be lost if ICE agents were not protecting our borders?
How many more innocent Americans would be harmed or murdered if we did
not have ICE agents to arrest illegal immigrants with criminal
convictions? These are the questions that those who call for the
abolishment of ICE should be asking.
It is outrageous. It is irresponsible to call for abolishing one of
our country's most critical security measures. Abolishing ICE would
give terrorists, gang members, drug dealers, and other criminals a
field day.
I stand for protecting American security. I stand for upholding the
rule of law. That is why I stand with ICE.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Hawaii.
Ms. HIRONO. Mr. President, this resolution being offered by my
colleagues on the other side of the aisle is a partisan political stunt
to distract the American people from the crisis created by Donald
Trump's zero tolerance policy.
Almost 3,000 children were ripped from the arms of their parents and
traumatized by the President's cruelty.
Yesterday, the Senate Judiciary Committee had a closed-door briefing
with officials from the Department of Justice, the Department of Health
and Human Services, and the Department of Homeland Security. The
American people deserve to hear from these officials in public and
under oath. All these officials provided at this briefing--not under
oath--was more obstruction and obfuscation. The witness from
Immigration and Customs Enforcement even claimed that they ``did not
mess up here.''
Separating almost 3,000 children from their parents, not meeting
judicially set deadlines for reunifying these children--the trauma
continues. Is there anybody in America paying attention to this issue
who actually believes there was no mess-up?
We need a public hearing to hear from these officials under oath.
Donald Trump is weaponizing fear to pursue his anti-immigration
agenda, and we are not going to be party to that. We should be focused
like laser beams on reuniting the children with their parents.
Mr. DURBIN. Will the Senator from Hawaii yield?
Ms. HIRONO. I yield to the Senator from Illinois.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic whip.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I would like to thank the Senator from
Hawaii for joining in this statement about the agency of ICE, which is
in the Department of Homeland Security.
There are certain things that I think Democrats and Republicans can
come together to agree on. Let me tell you what I think they are.
Border security--the United States needs security at its borders. There
is no question about that, whoever the President may be.
The second thing we agree on is, nobody who is dangerous should be
allowed to come to this country. Anyone
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here who is undocumented and dangerous should leave, should be removed.
We all agree on that, do we not?
The third thing, which 68 Senators agreed on, is comprehensive
immigration reform. Our immigration laws are a mess--an absolute mess.
That is why we continue to debate the topic, and 68 of us came to vote
on a bipartisan measure 5 years ago to fix the whole system. It passed
the Senate and died in the House.
Where are we today? We are here today debating on the floor the
future of ICE. There are parts of the function and responsibility of
this agency of ICE that all of us would agree on. ICE has important
responsibilities combating serious criminal activities, like smuggling,
bulk cash, drugs, weapons, human trafficking, violent criminals and
others who would do us harm, and enforcing immigration laws against
terrorists. There is no argument about that. But what has become
controversial is the Trump administration's new immigration policy.
You see, we don't have the resources to deport 11 million
undocumented people nor do we have the resources to arrest all who
present themselves at the border. What this administration has done,
though, is say that they are going to criminalize--charge as
criminals--everyone who shows up at the border. By doing that, they
take limited resources and focus them on a mass of people, most of whom
are no threat at all to the United States, instead of focusing their
resources on the drug smugglers, the traffickers, the would-be
terrorists. Those are our priorities for the safety of our homes, our
families, and our communities, are they not?
Here we have this resolution that was brought to the floor to commend
ICE in all its functions. I can just tell you, I don't join in that
resolution. I specifically don't join in it when it comes to the
President's zero tolerance policy.
It became the policy of the Trump administration and the U.S.
Government to forcibly remove 3,000 children from their parents. That
is bad enough, is it not? The notion that you take a baby out of the
arms of a mother--a toddler, an infant--separate a young child--we did
it under President Trump's zero tolerance policy.
Now let me state what added insult to that injury. At that point,
there was no effort made to make certain we could reunite the parents
with the children. Time and again, we would meet downstairs for a
briefing from ICE and other agencies, and they would tell us: We don't
know where the parents are. We really don't know where the kids are. We
are going to have to go looking.
Imagine separating up to 3,000 children from their parents, and the
U.S. Government did not keep a record of what happened to those kids.
Ship something by UPS--they give you a tracking number. Go online, and
you can track that package wherever it may be. Order a pizza from
Domino's. Call them after 15 minutes and ask: Where is the pizza? They
will tell you. Check your coat at a restaurant before you go to the
table. When you come back and hand them that little piece of paper,
they give you your coat. It is pretty simple, is it not? But when it
came to children and families, this agency, ICE, along with other
agencies of this government, lost them. In one agency in Chicago, they
told me that the search for the parents of the little kids they had was
like a scavenger hunt. They just started calling right and left to try
to figure out where the parent might be.
Yesterday, we had a briefing, and finally these agencies came up with
some numbers. There are 2,550 children still in our custody who are not
reunited with their families; 1,800 parents we haven't linked up with
their children. And we want to put a resolution on the floor to commend
this activity--to praise them for their great work? Not me.
They do good work in a lot of important areas, and I will be happy to
join in that chorus. But we stand here and ignore the obvious--that
this zero tolerance policy has given our Nation a black eye, has raised
questions about our values as Americans, has created situations we
cannot morally defend, such as separating children from their mothers.
Do you know what the American Academy of Pediatrics tells us? The
doctors tell us it is an institutional form of child abuse to remove
these children.
I have seen them, these poor kids, 5 and 6 years old in these
settings. The place I visited in Chicago was doing its best to help the
children, but two little girls walked into the room where I was
sitting. They were holding hands--cute little kids. It was my
opportunity to meet about 10 or 12 kids who were separated from their
parents under the zero tolerance policy.
These two little girls were holding hands, and I thought they were
sisters. We asked in Spanish. ``No, amigas,'' she said. They had become
friends to one another.
It turns out that the one who was 5 years old was from Guatemala and
the one who was 6 years old was from Chiapas, Mexico. They were holding
on to one another. All they had was one another because our government
had separated them from their mothers.
Now this agency is struggling to find these mothers. In some
circumstances, they cannot even link up the children with their
parents.
No, I am not going to join in a resolution of congratulations for the
work they have done. Many of the things they have done have been
courageous and important for the security of this country, but when it
comes to the zero tolerance policy, it is not.
I do want to make one last point. Listen to what the top agents at
ICE's Homeland Security Investigations agency, which focuses on serious
transnational criminal activity, had to say. Last month, a majority of
the agents focusing on transnational criminal activity wrote a letter
to the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Kirstjen
Nielsen, asking that Homeland Security Investigations be removed from
ICE because of ``the political nature of civil immigration
enforcement.''
These are men and women who are focusing on serious crimes, and they
asked to be removed from ICE. They are tired of the politics. I am
weary of it as well.
We need to start solving these problems--border security, dangerous
people kept out of this country and removed, comprehensive immigration
reform. And for goodness' sake, reunite these children with their
parents.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.
Mr. CRUZ. Mr. President, I rise in support of the brave men and women
of our Immigration Customs Enforcement agency. These are law
enforcement officers who risk their lives every day to keep this
country safe.
Rising in support of law enforcement used to be a bipartisan issue.
It used to be an issue that brought us together, that unified us.
Sadly, as we have seen in the preceding minutes, that is no longer the
case.
I rise today to urge my Democratic colleagues to say no to the
reckless and radical voices within their party that are pulling their
party so far out of the mainstream and so far out of touch with the
American people that it is barely recognizable. For a long time, when
Democrats were debating immigration issues, they used to say ``Well, of
course, we support enforcing the laws,'' almost as an obligatory
throwaway. Instead, we are here today, debating the abolishing of the
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, the exact antithesis of
where most congressional Democrats claimed they were. All of this
started because a few weeks ago, a longtime Democratic incumbent, a
Member of the House, found himself beaten in a primary in New York
State by an avowed socialist. As a result, many of my colleagues on the
Democratic side of the aisle are suddenly terrified of their left
flank. Because her campaign focused on abolishing ICE--abolishing the
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, more incumbent Democrats
have said that they, too, are open to abolishing ICE.
I call on this body to pull back from the abyss. On immigration there
are areas of good-faith disagreement that this body has debated and
will continue to debate. I have long characterized my views on
immigration as being able to be summed up in four words: legal, good;
illegal, bad. I think the vast majority of Texans and the vast majority
of Americans agree with that. There
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are a host of immigration policies that ought to be commonsense
bipartisan policies.
The Presiding Officer has shown great leadership in fighting against
sanctuary cities, fighting against jurisdictions that defy Federal
immigration law and that release violent criminals without being
willing to turn them over to immigration officials. Those violent
criminals, in turn, go on far too often to commit even more violent
crimes.
I am the author of Kate's Law, a commonsense proposal which says that
aggravated felons who repeatedly enter the country illegally should
face a mandatory minimum prison sentence. It was named for Kate
Steinle, a beautiful young woman, 28 years old, murdered on a
California pier by an illegal immigrant who had been deported over and
over and over again and had been in and out of jail over and over and
over again and had multiple felony convictions. Yet, because San
Francisco is a sanctuary city, they released him yet again, and he
committed murder.
Kate Steinle would be alive if we could come together on Kate's Law,
if we could come together on ending sanctuary cities. Yet it turns out
that in today's hyperpolarized world, even that is not extreme enough
for the modern Democratic Party. Multiple leaders of their party are
advocating abolishing the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.
What does ICE do? ICE men and women--I have met with a great many of
them in my home State of Texas. I have met with a great many Border
Patrol agents. I have joined them on their midnight muster. I have gone
out on patrol with them as they risk their lives securing our border
and risk their lives keeping us safe in the interior.
Criminal aliens arrested by ICE in fiscal year 2017 were responsible
for more than 76,000 dangerous drug offenses; yet many Democrats are
saying: Abolish their role. They were responsible for over 48,000
assault offenses. They were responsible for over 11,000 weapons
offenses. They were responsible for over 5,000 sexual assault offenses.
They were responsible for over 2,000 kidnapping offenses, and they were
responsible for over 1,800 homicide offenses.
Yet the approach of the modern Democratic Party is not to find a
reasonable, commonsense common ground. It is, instead, to say: Abolish
the agency that has arrested criminals responsible for over 1,800
murders.
When it comes to drugs--the volume they are dealing with in fighting
the narcotics traffickers--ICE in fiscal year 2017 seized more than
980,000 pounds of narcotics. ICE seized approximately 2,370 pounds of
fentanyl, approximately 6,967 pounds of heroin. Yet, today, too many
elected Democrats are afraid that they, too, might face a socialist
primary and that their far left is so angry, hates President Trump so
much, that their position is not that we should enforce the immigration
laws; their position is not that they will stand with law enforcement.
Their position has become to abolish the Immigration and Customs
Enforcement agency, the agency charged with enforcing our immigration
laws.
This is not a reasonable position and a public policy debate upon
which reasonable minds might differ. There are many of those in the
immigration world. This is not one of them. This is a radical and
reckless position.
Yet, this resolution--by the way, this resolution says not a word
about the issue of family separation. We have heard some of the
speeches from my Democratic colleagues focused on family separation. I
can state that every Member of this body, Democrat and Republican,
agrees that families should not be separated.
Indeed, I have introduced legislation to prohibit family separation,
to ensure that children stay with their parents--the best place for a
kid is with his or her mom or dad--but to do so in a way that also
respects the rule of law, that doesn't return to the failed policy of
catch-and-release that only encourages more and more illegal
immigration, that only puts more and more children--little boys and
girls--in a position of being physically and sexually assaulted by
human traffickers.
No one who cares about humanity, no one who cares about compassion
should want to incentivize putting little children in the control of
global, transnational drug cartels and human traffickers.
For the past several weeks, I have been negotiating with Democratic
Members of this body, trying to see if we could reach common ground to
unite and say that we will not separate families, but at the same time,
we will respect the rule of law and not return to catch-and-release in
a way that incentivizes illegal immigration.
We will find out if any Democrats are willing to find common ground.
All 100 could join together on ending family release and ending it
today, but too many on the Democratic side want to condition ending
family release on essentially mandating the release of every illegal
alien in custody--those apprehended with children, mandating their
release. That is not a reasonable position. That is not a position the
American people support, and, critically, this resolution before the
Senate says not a word about it.
This resolution does not address that question. Instead, this
resolution says that those ICE agents--the ICE agents who right now may
be kicking down the door on a meth house and facing violent drug lords,
firing weapons at them, risking their lives to keep us safe--we stand
with those law enforcement agencies, even if we may disagree on the
parameters of illegal immigration.
I am one who believes we should welcome and embrace legal
immigrants--those who follow the rules and wait in line like my father
in 1957, when he came as an immigrant from Cuba seeking freedom. Those
are debates we can have.
We ought to be coming together in the spirit of bipartisan agreement
to stand with law enforcement. I call upon the responsible members of
the Democratic Party--and, surely, there must be some left. Surely, in
the Democratic Party, there are some voices that are willing to stand
up to the reckless and radical left and say: No, we should not abolish
the agency charged with enforcing our immigration laws, charged with
protecting us from vicious and violent criminals.
The fact that Senate Democrats are today objecting to this resolution
shows just how captive they are to the fury that rages against
President Trump.
Everyone in this Chamber has, at one time or another, had something
the President has said or done that we all disagreed with. That is part
of the political process, but the rage and fury on the far left is a
qualitatively different matter. It is a rage that is demanding
Democrats to go after, to undercut, to attack law enforcement agents
who keep us safe. That is a mistake. It is a disservice to this
institution. It is a disservice to the legacy of many distinguished
Senators and a disservice to the American people and the Constitution
that we are sworn to protect.
I urge this body to pass this commonsense resolution, standing with
law enforcement, enforcing our borders, and stopping violent criminals,
murderers, kidnappers, and rapists that ICE arrests every year.
Abolishing law enforcement puts all of us at peril. I call upon my
Democratic colleagues to reject that radical and reckless position.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida.
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, this Senator came to talk about trade, and
I am going to do that, but I think what we have is an example of
extremes in politics that is on display before us.
I think, on the one hand, political points are trying to be scored
about the abolition of certain law enforcement organizations. On the
other hand, there are the political points that a government,
especially our government, should not have a policy of separating
children from their parents, unless the parents have committed a crime
and need to be incarcerated for the purpose of that crime.
Here we have the extremes again going to either side, when, in fact,
if there were good will, if there were not such a highly polarized,
highly charged, partisan atmosphere, in part, as we say in the South,
egged on by various Members of the leadership in the Congress as well
as the Executive--if we didn't have all of that, we could get a lot
more done.
The genius of American politics is for us to be able to come
together, to respect each other, to understand the
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other fellow's point of view, and then work out our differences.
It is the same thing on the international stage. That is why we see
it is so difficult to reach international agreements when people have
gotten hardened into positions because of race or religion or political
balance.
So if you note a tone of sadness in this Senator's voice, then you
are correct because, again, we are seeing the polarization of American
politics.
Why can't we have a law enforcement organization that also doesn't
have to operate under a policy of separating children from their
parents? That is the commonsense point of view, but, no, we devolve
into these extremes.