[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 129 (Tuesday, July 30, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5154-S5156]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--H.R. 549
Madam President, as if in legislative session, I ask unanimous
consent that the Judiciary Committee be discharged from further
consideration of H.R. 549 and the Senate proceed to its immediate
consideration; further, that the bill be 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. Is there objection?
The Senator from Utah.
Mr. LEE. Madam President, I reserve the right to object after raising
a couple of observations.
It is important to know that this bill was passed by the House of
Representatives Thursday night. We just received the paperwork from the
House of Representatives yesterday. This is a bill that did not pass
unanimously in the House of Representatives--far from it. There were at
least 158 Republicans who voted against it.
There are a number of my colleagues in the Senate who, like me, would
like to see this and many other bills considered but would also like
the opportunity to adequately review the legislation as passed and to
propose amendments and have those amendments voted on. So passing this
bill right now without that opportunity to review it, to propose
amendments and have those considered, and just passing this unanimously
is not the way we ought to be passing this legislation.
I am happy to work with my distinguished colleague and my revered
friend from Illinois in moving in that direction, but we are not ready
to pass this by unanimous consent right now. We have amendments to
propose. So on that basis, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, I want to thank my colleague from Utah.
I am sorry he objected to my request.
Why are we moving so quickly on this? Because it is a matter of life
and death, that is why. Why did we decide that this is of such an
emergency nature that the House has moved on this already? Because,
literally, people who are forced to return to Venezuela may face death.
That is why we are moving on this as quickly as we are.
I want to thank the House of Representatives for passing this
measure. It is time for the Senate to act, and we certainly have the
time on the floor to achieve that.
As I mentioned, if you go to Venezuela, as I did last year, you can
see literally on the streets the impact of this disintegration of their
economy and the problems they are facing.
I visited Children's Hospital in Caracas, and it was heartbreaking
for the medical staff to sit down at the table and tell me they didn't
have the basic medicines we find in our medicine chests at home or in
the clinics of America when it came to treating these children. They
did not have antibiotics. They didn't have cancer drugs.
The economy in Venezuela is disintegrating before our eyes, and these
people--Venezuelans in the United States, students and others--are
saying they would like to remain in the United States and stay here
until it is more stable in their country. Historically, there were no
questions asked, and we did that. We have done it over and over again.
But under this administration, whenever the word ``immigrant'' comes
into the conversation, they freeze.
The same Trump administration has told us that the Maduro regime is
unacceptable and that we have to get rid of it because of the terrible
things that are happening, that the people of Venezuela should have a
free election to decide their leader. This same administration will not
help the Venezuelans who say they are fearful of heading home to a
country that is so dangerous.
Let me read what this administration, which refuses to give temporary
protected status, says to people from the United States who may want to
visit Venezuela. To me, it tells the whole story. Here is what the
Trump State Department says about Venezuela today in the following
travel advisory to American citizens:
Do not travel to Venezuela due to crime, civil unrest, poor
health infrastructure, and arbitrary arrest and detention of
U.S. citizens. . . . Violent crime, such as homicide, armed
robbery, kidnapping, and carjacking, is common. . . . There
are shortages of food, electricity, water, medicine, and
medical supplies throughout much of Venezuela.
Those are the words of the Trump administration about this country of
Venezuela, and when I ask that those who are Venezuelan who are in our
country not be forced to return to those conditions, there is an
objection not only from my friend the Republican Senator from Utah but
also from the Trump administration.
Now, make no mistake, if temporary protected status is granted, that
does not mean we won't ask any questions of the Venezuelans here. They
will have to go through a criminal background check. If they are a
dangerous person, they are gone, period. No questions. They are gone.
And that is the
[[Page S5155]]
way it should be. But for those, for example, in my State who are
university students, who have their student visas coming to an end--
they are asking me: Senator Durbin, will you allow me to stay in the
United States until it is safe in my country?
Is that an unreasonable request? If it were Americans in similar
plights in places around the world, wouldn't we say: Give them a break.
Give them a chance to stay in a safe place.
I will close. I want to defer to my friend from New Jersey, Senator
Menendez, on this issue.
When I went to Venezuela last year, in Caracas, I had a meeting. It
was a dinner meeting, and it was an unusual one because it was with six
members of the General Assembly who are opponents of President Maduro,
who is currently their leader in that country. These opposition leaders
opposed him, and their lives were at stake because of it.
We had dinner in a restaurant. It was an unusual dinner. It was
upstairs in a back room, and the door was closed so that no one could
see us. There were six of them, and they said to me: If you come back
next year, Senator, two of us will have been deported, two of us will
be in prison; and two of us will have disappeared.
That is what happens to the opposition in Venezuela if you happen to
oppose President Maduro. It is that dangerous.
One of those six was a man named Juan Guaido. I met him that night
for the first time. Little did I know that he would step up several
months ago and put his life and his family's lives on the line to say:
I think Venezuela needs new leadership. Exceptional courage on his
part. I met him then. I have met his wife since. They are literally
risking their lives for their country. They understand how dangerous it
is.
All I asked for today on the floor is for those Venezuelans who wish
to stay here in safety until this political scenario plays out, that
they be allowed to stay here. That is all I was asking for--temporary
protected status. I am sorry that Senator Lee objected. He did note,
though, that in some period of time--I hope very soon--he will
reconsider that position and give us a chance to provide safety for the
Venezuelans who are visiting here in the United States.
Because he is here and has been such a great ally of mine in this
effort, I would like to yield the floor to my friend from New Jersey,
Senator Menendez.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
Mr. MENENDEZ. Madam President, let me thank my colleague from
Illinois, who has been a clarion voice in this regard, a strong
proponent of human rights and democracy in Venezuela and in other parts
of the world, but in this case, in Venezuela; who has traveled there at
a time when people could not travel--certainly from the Congress--in an
effort to see if there was a pathway forward and to see the plight of
the Venezuelan people. I really appreciate his cosponsorship with me on
this temporary protected status for Venezuelans. His leadership is
critically important, not only as the Democratic whip but also as a
senior member of the Judiciary Committee that I hope can take up this
legislation.
I will say this: I regret that our colleague from Utah, No. 1,
objected, and No. 2, left. I would just make two observations on his
comments. No. 1, there was a strong bipartisan vote in the House of
Representatives. So, no, there was not unanimity, but there was a
strong bipartisan vote in the House of Representatives. Secondly, this
legislation has been over here in the Senate for some time. We have
offered it for some time, so it is not new.
Thirdly, I would just say as to whether we get to legislate in this
Chamber, that depends on the majority leader and his side of the aisle,
who control the floor. We would like to see legislating take place. We
would be happy to have a debate on the fierce urgency of this as it
relates to this issue of TPS, temporary protected status.
I fear my colleague was unaware of what he objected to. This is
urgently needed legislation that would have granted that temporary--
underline temporary--protected status. This is a class of people who
need to be protected, the approximately 200,000 Venezuelans currently
residing in the United States.
As we all know, the Maduro regime has created an unprecedented
humanitarian crisis in Venezuela that has now forced more than 4
million Venezuelans and migrants to flee their homeland--more than 4
million. Think about it. This is on the verge of becoming one of the
greatest humanitarian catastrophes in a refugee situation that we have
in the world--and that is something considering what has happened in
Syria and other places in the world--right here in our own hemisphere.
In response to this humanitarian tragedy, last December--this has
been around several months--Senator Durbin offered the first bipartisan
bill to provide TPS for Venezuelans, which we reintroduced in February.
Last week, the House passed their own bipartisan version of the
legislation with support of dozens of Republican Members. It is an
unconscionable moral failing for the Senate not to approve this
legislation.
Earlier this month, as the senior member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, I traveled to the Venezuela border to see the
crisis firsthand. I returned convinced that we cannot afford to sit on
the sidelines any longer. My colleague, I think, would not have
objected to TPS for Venezuelans if he saw what I saw.
During my trip to Cucuta, I walked on the Colombian side of the Simon
Bolivar International Bridge, between Colombia and Venezuela, amidst
thousands of Venezuelan refugees--30,000 cross each and every day--and
migrants who cross into Colombia each and every day. I joined thousands
of Venezuelans who were fleeing hunger as they sought food at the
Divine Providence soup kitchen.
I visited patients seeking medical care that is no longer available
in Venezuela. By the way, Venezuela should be one of the wealthiest
countries in the Western Hemisphere. It has huge oil and natural gas
reserves, but despite that they can't get medical care in Venezuela
because the hospital system has completely collapsed. When I was there
in Colombia at the border, the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights issued a report decrying that the Maduro regime's security
forces had murdered nearly 7,000 Venezuelans in the last 2 years--
7,000. My colleague cannot possibly want to return Venezuelans to the
cruel conditions they are fleeing. That is what temporary protected
status is all about.
I have applauded--I don't find too many times in which I am in
agreement with the Trump administration, but I supported their efforts
on sanctions and other efforts around the Maduro regime so we can
restore democracy and human rights, but how can you say and do all the
things you are doing in Venezuela and then have a deportation force
that wants to round up these people who have done nothing wrong and
send them back to the country where 7,000 have been killed by Maduro?
These extraordinary conditions have scattered millions of Venezuelans
in countries across the Americas. Today 1.3 million reside in Colombia,
750,000 in Peru, 250,000 in Ecuador, and the numbers keep growing.
Colombia and its neighbors have largely welcomed Venezuelans as they
flee a devastating humanitarian catastrophe.
By not approving this bill today, the United States is failing to
match their efforts and failing to approve temporary protected status
for the vulnerable of Venezuelans already living in our country.
For those who doubt whether TPS would make a difference for these
Venezuelan families, let me share with you a few stories provided to my
office by the respected Venezuelan human rights group Foro Penal.
Yuley Gomez is the mother of Luis David, a 4-year-old who has a
delicate heart condition. In Venezuela, Yuley asked for help from
everyone she could, but all she received was a prescription for
painkillers. In a closed-door meeting, she was told privately to wait
for the inevitable death of her child, a 4-year-old. Just imagine being
told to wait for a son or daughter to succumb to a treatable illness.
No parent would do that.
After great personal sacrifice, Yuley made it to the United States
and admitted her son into Boston Children's Hospital. Three years
later, David is
[[Page S5156]]
thriving, but he requires frequent checkups and treatments that remain
unavailable in Venezuela to this day.
Then there is Leila Calderon, who resides in my home State of New
Jersey. Her nephew, who once lived with her in Caracas, is a pilot in
the Venezuela Armed Forces. He was wrongly arrested for plotting to
overthrow Maduro. In the absence of evidence, he was released from
jail, but on his way home, he received a call warning him that military
counterintelligence agents were waiting for him. When he tried to hide,
security forces arbitrarily arrested his mother, his girlfriend, and
his father-in-law. The following day, he was detained and charged once
more, again with no evidence. He remains imprisoned today.
Even Leila, who has publicly advocated for his release, has been
labeled as a ``terrorist'' on national television by the regime thug
Diosdado Cabello.
Let me share the story of Omar Acosta. His brother, Captain Rafael
Acosta Arevalo, was detained on June 21, 2019, by members of the
Venezuela military counterintelligence. After being forcibly imprisoned
for a week, on June 28 of 2019, Captain Acosta was rolled into an
arraignment hearing in a wheelchair, visibly affected by torture. He
died the following day. The kind of torture that took Captain Acosta's
life is one of the many dangers Venezuelans in the United States would
need to fear if we don't approve TPS.
The Maduro regime's unthinkable abuses have created a full-blown
refugee crisis in our own hemisphere. These extraordinary, and what we
pray are temporary, conditions prevent millions of Venezuelans from
safely returning home, including nearly 200,000 in our own country.
There has been a broad bipartisan support for the Trump
administration's effort to confront the Maduro regime. However, as we
confront Maduro, we cannot turn our back on the Venezuelan people.
Unfortunately, today the Senate has chosen not to act. We could have
sent legislation to the President's desk that ensures that vulnerable
Venezuelans in the United States are not sent back into harm's way--
into potential death or imprisonment. Instead, we did nothing.
This is a tragedy in its own right. This is what we could have
avoided today. I am sure Senator Durbin and I will continue to push
forward. We will both challenge the leadership here to allow us either
to have this passed or give us a vote. I think the community should
know who stands on their side and whether they are willing to protect
them temporarily from the enormous humanitarian catastrophe--the great
risk of the loss of life or liberty that exists for Venezuelans in the
United States who have fled to freedom.
We are going to go out of session the end of this week. That means
all these people will languish for the summer, not knowing whether, in
fact, they can be deported back to a country in which they may well
lose their life or their liberty. That is pretty outrageous. If we
can't get it done this week, I hope to God we can get it done in
September. If not, I worry about a continuing crisis that will only
lead to greater uncertainty and create greater risk to those simply
fleeing freedom and who are being, by the way, very productive citizens
here while they are temporarily in our country.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. I want to thank my colleague from New Jersey for his
statement and leadership on this issue.
It is time. When you think about the circumstances, I am reminded of
when I was in Caracas last year. It was 11 p.m. at night after I
finished with this dinner with the opposition leaders. As I was headed
back to the hotel, I saw long lines of people standing by ATM machines
at 11 p.m. at night. I asked what that was all about. Well, they are
facing hyperinflation in Venezuela--1 million percent, whatever it may
be. Every day, these people have to stand in line to withdraw the
maximum amount from their savings accounts so the next morning they
have enough money to take the bus to work. That is the circumstance.
The economy of this country has collapsed.
The medical care, which you mentioned, and I found at this children's
hospital and other places, is virtually nonexistent. Diseases, which
were once eradicated in Venezuela, are returning. Children are dying
from diseases which long ago we believed were gone. Now they are back
because there is no vaccine, nothing to treat these children.
When we ask the Trump administration, which has told us they want to
get rid of Maduro, to give the Venezuelans a chance at a free election;
when we ask them, will you at least show some sympathy for the
Venezuelans in the United States who don't want to return, who want
temporary protection until this political mess is over--when we ask
them will you give them that protection, we get a letter from Mr.
Cuccinelli, who is now the head of citizen services, saying: No, we are
not going to do that.
How can you have it both ways? How can you say you care for the
people of Venezuela, you acknowledge the terrible circumstances of
their leader, Maduro, yet when it comes to those in the United States,
you force them to return to this circumstance?
As you just described, for many of them, you are forcing the return
to a circumstance which is threatening, if not deadly, with 7,000
already killed by their secret police and who knows how many have not
been reported who could have been victims as well.
Today we made this request on the floor. A Republican Senator
objected. The next time I am going to come to the floor, I will ask our
Republican cosponsors to join us. This is a bipartisan effort to try to
protect these Venezuela people. If they will come join us, perhaps the
leadership on the Republican side will have second thoughts and give
these people of Venezuela a chance to be protected here until their
country is safe.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
Mr. MENENDEZ. Madam President, one final comment to my colleague. The
7,000 who have been killed by Maduro's secret police is reflective of
the fact that those who are here are some of the earliest opponents of
Maduro--those who tried to create change but fled. They have a
heightened reason why, in fact, going back--in addition to the chaos
and in addition to the danger--they are particularly threatened, at the
end of the day, because they are the ones who were trying to create
change and found a situation in which the threat of their life was at
risk so they came to the United States.
Getting protected status--if there was ever a moment in which
temporary protected status was envisioned, it is for this situation.
I yield the floor.
Mr. DURBIN. 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. THUNE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.