[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 61 (Wednesday, April 6, 2022)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2020-S2021]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--S. 3959
Mr. HAGERTY. Madam President, I am here today to discuss what I saw
this past weekend when I took a trip to our southern border in Texas.
I led a delegation of eight sheriffs and mayors from my home State of
Tennessee. We went to see what is happening, what the effects of the
border crisis are, and to hear from them and allow the border agents to
hear from them the effects of the border crisis in our own communities
in Tennessee.
Our mayors and sheriffs are seeing record drug overdoses, gang
violence, and other forms of criminal activity right there in
Tennessee.
We learned that what is really happening at our border is quite
simple: Well-financed, operationally sophisticated drug cartels, with
the help of the Chinese Communist Party, are exploiting our immigration
policies and human economic desires to make billions of dollars from
drug and human trafficking.
Ignored by the Biden administration and the corporate media, this
increasingly powerful criminal enterprise is expanding further into
American communities.
Our trip revealed two key insights. First, under Biden policies, this
national security crisis is unmanageable. Second, and paradoxically,
this crisis is well within the Federal Government's ability to fix.
My central takeaway was this: If every American saw what we saw and
heard, this would end. America wouldn't tolerate this. It is a crisis.
Here is the cartels' business model: Fentanyl ingredients are shipped
from China to Mexico. In Mexico, the cartels turn these chemicals into
astonishingly potent drugs bound for the United States.
Last year, fentanyl seized at the border was more than enough to kill
every American. And that is just what we caught. Think about what has
not been caught. Think about what is getting through.
The cartels control the entire Mexican side of the U.S. border, and
each migrant must pay thousands of dollars for safe passage to these
cartels. Often, they have to pay through subsequent indentured
servitude. Many young women become victims of human trafficking.
So in this vicious cycle, the more illegal immigration, the more
money for the cartels; and the more money for the cartels, the more
drugs they produce.
For cartels, the illegal immigrants are more than an expendable
revenue source. They are a tool for facilitating transport of drugs and
criminals. The cartels push scores of migrant customers across the
border so they can occupy American border agents. Then they exploit the
resulting gaps in patrol coverage to move across drugs, gang members,
those they refer to as ``high-value'' individuals, terrorist-watch-list
members, and others.
Border Patrol agents told me that, given the recordbreaking border
crossings they are currently facing, there are times when every agent
is busy processing migrant paperwork, leaving the border wide open for
drug and human trafficking. The drugs and gang members and the
accompanying violence will then flood into our American communities.
As one agent put it: The people crossing the border don't stay in
this area, and neither do the drugs.
More than 100,000 Americans died last year from drug overdoses,
mostly from fentanyl, which are really more akin to CCP-engineered
poisonings. Several thousands were Tennesseans. The Tennessee sheriffs
and mayors on this trip told me that deaths from illicit drug overdoses
in their counties are at record highs. Our Tennessee sheriffs know the
families in their communities. They told me the toughest part of their
job is to see a mother or a grandmother, to go to their home and tell
them that their son or their grandson will never return. It is
heartbreaking. Each one of these obituaries has the CCP's fingerprint
on it.
The migrants' money and usefulness to distract border agents are
essential to the cartels' operations. These illegal immigrants are
incentivized to come because of our current catch-and-release policies.
To illustrate the current policy of absurdity, last Friday, around
midnight, near a stretch of--of course--unfinished border wall, right
outside of McAllen, TX, our vehicle came across about 15 recently
arrived migrants. They approached us and asked us where they could find
the Border Patrol agents. They wanted to turn themselves in, having
been coached by their cartel handlers that this was the first step to
U.S. Government-funded release into America. Our policies are so
upside-down that the suspects are looking for the officers.
Nevertheless, U.S. Border Patrol and other law enforcement Agencies
are working tirelessly day and night to protect our Nation.
Understandably, morale is at an all-time low with a Biden
administration that refuses to give them the tools that they need to
deal with this crisis.
Border Patrol can process a maximum of roughly 5,000 migrants a day.
Right now, they are facing nearly 8,000 migrants a day. And when the
Biden administration lifts title 42 authority, they fear that the
number could exceed 15,000 per day.
Therefore, and unsurprisingly, the constant plea I heard from Border
Patrol agents was this: We need effective policy, not more agents, not
more equipment. Bad policies are what have created this incentive to
cross the border, and eliminating these policies is the only fix. Our
agents signed up to protect our border, not to facilitate its demise.
Border agents in Laredo told me that the Migrant Protection
Protocols, known as MPP, were a perfect illustration of the need for
policy change. MPP was a policy that required migrants seeking asylum
in the United States to remain in Mexico until it was determined
whether or not they were actually entitled to asylum. Most are not.
When it was implemented in 2019, the agent said it was like flipping
a switch because this stopped people coming when they knew that they
wouldn't get in.
This ``Remain in Mexico'' policy cut illegal border crossings
dramatically in fiscal year 2020. Yet the Biden administration nixed
the MPP, and, not surprisingly, border crossings more than quadrupled
in fiscal year 2021.
With the help of their media allies, Washington Democrats ignore this
crisis and they hope that the American people will too. They don't
travel to
[[Page S2021]]
the border because they don't want to answer for the crisis that they
have created. They have chosen appeasement of loud, radical immigration
groups over American security, over American sovereignty.
President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris haven't seen the
border stations where the agents sacrifice day and night, mentally and
physically, battling a crisis that their Departments haven't given them
the tools to address.
For many Americans, this crisis seems far away, at least until it is
too late--until it is their child, their grandchild, their brother and
sister who become a statistic.
That is the other thing that I heard constantly from Border Patrol
and law enforcement agents: We need someone to tell America what is
happening here.
With the President and media averting their eyes and abdicating their
responsibilities, it becomes even more critical to spread the word
before more American lives are needlessly lost, before more migrants'
lives are destroyed in the journey or through indentured servitude once
they arrive, and more communities are damaged beyond repair.
So what can we do to address this crisis?
Even though the border cries is worse than ever, the Biden
administration is voluntarily ending title 42 pandemic-related
authority for expedited removal.
The Border Patrol agents I met this weekend believe that this will
make this recordbreaking crisis substantially worse. Such a surrender
of American security would be intolerable.
And there is another health crisis that title 42 is critical to
battling. The cartels send migrants across at strategic points to bog
down Border Patrol agents with paperwork processing that takes five
times longer without title 42. Then they use the resulting enforcement
gaps to move fentanyl across the border.
We have to close these enforcement gaps with better policy.
So I have introduced legislation to add drug smuggling as an
additional basis for title 42 authority. Overdoses have become an
epidemic in America. This legislation would allow the Secretary of
Health and Human Services to use title 42 to combat drug trafficking
across the border. This bill would give our Border Patrol agents the
tools they need to quickly remove migrants who illegally cross the
border, substantially freeing up agents to focus on actually stopping
drug traffickers.
More than 100,000 Americans died last year from drug overdoses, many
from fentanyl coming from across our southern border. We desperately
need title 42 to fight this drug epidemic. It is a tool that would
quite literally save American lives in every State in the Union
immediately.
So, as in legislative session, I ask unanimous consent that the
Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions be discharged from
further consideration of S. 3959 and the Senate proceed to its
immediate consideration. I further ask that the bill be considered read
a third time and passed and that the motion to reconsider be considered
made and laid upon the table.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
The Senator from Hawaii.
Mr. SCHATZ. Madam President, reserving the right to object.
This is not the right way to get at the fentanyl problem. This gives
the Secretary permission to shut down all asylum seekers from a country
on the basis of any type of drug, no matter how much is in possession,
how frequently that drug is possessed, what country they are coming
from. We are calling for essentially a complete shutdown of the asylum
program because there might be fentanyl somewhere. But it also gives
the Secretary authority to stop asylum seekers coming from any country
for any drug at any scale.
Now, title 42 authority is a serious thing. It is a blanket authority
to block anyone presenting themselves for asylum. We have seen the
horrific images in Ukraine. We know between 4 and 5 million people are
already refugees, and we know that the United States, as the
indispensable Nation, wants to take a leadership role in accommodating
these refugees in Europe and, if necessary, in the United States.
People presenting themselves for asylum, escaping their dangerous
home country--that is actually part of the American dream. That is, in
a lot of ways, how many of us arrived, right? There may not have been
this statutory framework, but the principle involved was not just that
you came from some other place far away to make a better life for
yourself--sometimes it was that, but sometimes it was to escape the
pogrom, as was the case with my grandparents, from Kyiv to Odesa,
actually to Canada, and then to Hawaii.
And so this authority is no small thing. And to give the Secretary of
HHS this blanket authority to essentially shut down all asylum seekers
because we are afraid--appropriately afraid--of a specific drug is just
a little ham-fisted.
And I appreciate the Senator's remarks. I think there are better ways
to work on this, and therefore I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The Senator from Tennessee.
Mr. HAGERTY. Madam President, I want to thank my colleague from
Hawaii for his remarks, but I want to explain what just happened here.
My colleague objects, despite the fact that recordbreaking numbers of
Americans are currently dying from overdoses, fueled by fentanyl coming
across our border. This legislation is a tool to help save American
lives. Indeed, 100,000 American lives were lost last year to drug
overdoses. These lives are being deprived of the American dream
forever. So Democrats are categorically opposed to commonsense border
security tools to prevent drug trafficking into America no matter how
bad the drug overdose numbers get? How much longer will it take to
change course from the Biden administration policies that have created
this national security crisis? How much longer will we allow our
immigration system to be manipulated by a massive transnational
criminal alliance between the Chinese communists and billion-dollar
cartels who are shipping deadly quantities of illicit drugs into the
United States?
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.