[Congressional Record Volume 170, Number 48 (Tuesday, March 19, 2024)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2425-S2426]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                               DREAM Act

  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I rise again today to discuss an issue 
that I have been working on for more than 20 years: the ongoing 
uncertainty and plight facing America's Dreamers.
  It was a little over 20 years ago when my office in Chicago got a 
telephone call. There was a girl graduating from high school in 
Chicago, and she had a problem. The good news was she was a musical 
prodigy; she played the piano, and she was extraordinary. The bad news 
was she was undocumented.
  She had been brought to the United States at the age of 2. Her 
parents had brought her originally from Korea through Brazil to 
Chicago. Her father's goal in life was to become a minister of a church 
and preach the gospel, and she used to travel with him to these 
churches and pound away at the piano while he was practicing his 
sermons. Over the years, she enlisted in a program called the Merit 
music program and developed her piano skills to an extraordinary level.
  All of her teachers said to her--Tereza Lee was her name--you have 
got to go to music school. Juilliard, Manhattan Conservatory--you 
qualify for all of them.
  So she sat down to fill out the application and came to the space 
that said her nationality and citizenship. She didn't know what to put 
there, so one of her friends called our office, figuring Senator Durbin 
would know the answer. Well, we found the answer, and it was terrible. 
Because she was an undocumented person in the United States and had 
been here since the age of 2, her recourse under the law was and still 
is to leave the United States for 10 years and petition to come back 
in. She was 18 years old. Her prospect was ridiculous.
  As a result of that casework, I decided to introduce a bill called 
the DREAM Act. The DREAM Act basically said, if you came to the United 
States under the age of 18, grew up in this country, and had no 
problems with the law, you should have a path to citizenship. It was 
that basic. Well, as one can guess, we tried to pass that bill many 
times. It has passed on the floor of the Senate a couple of times, but 
never have we been able to get both the Senate and the House together 
on this issue.
  I continue to come to the floor to talk about it because there is a 
new wrinkle. It seems that one of my former Senate colleagues became 
President of the United States, Barack Obama. He had cosponsored the 
DREAM Act, and I appealed to him, along with Senator Richard Lugar, a 
Republican of Indiana, to create by Executive order some program that 
could protect these young people. He created DACA. DACA, at one point, 
had almost 800,000 young people in America protected from deportation 
as they renewed every 2 years their status with DACA so they could go 
to school; they could have a life; and maybe, someday, at some future 
time, actually become citizens of the United States.
  I thought the best way to describe this issue to people--because it 
is still in controversy and still tied up in the courts as to whether 
DACA will have a future--was to share stories of the DACA recipients 
and who they are. I do that again today. This is the 141st DACA 
recipient Dreamer about whom I have told the story here on the floor of 
the Senate.
  This young man's name is Edon Molla. He came to the United States 
with his family when he was 2 years old, fleeing the war in Kosovo. He 
excelled in the United States. He was the salutatorian of his high 
school class; and he helped to lead his high school basketball team to 
three undefeated seasons, three State titles, and two national 
championships.

[[Page S2426]]

  His story goes on from there. He was selected for the all-State team 
and played Division I basketball at St. Francis College in Brooklyn, 
NY. In addition to his basketball career, Edon excelled in the 
classroom and graduated from college with honors.
  After college, multiple teams approached him about playing 
professional basketball in Europe. Unfortunately, he was forced to 
decline all of these offers because of his immigration status, but he 
didn't let it discourage him. He switched paths and started to pursue a 
new career in the music industry. With DACA, Edon has become a renowned 
professional musician. He has worked with successful artists like 
Roberta Flack, released an album, and performed at a music festival 
headlined by major international stars.
  In addition to his successful music and basketball careers, Edon has 
made time to give back to his community. He has led a basketball clinic 
for children with cancer, taught music lessons to kids with special 
needs, and performed at multiple charity concerts. Edon is now starting 
a master's in business administration at Cornell University. He plans 
to pursue his master's degree as he continues his musical career.
  DACA has allowed Edon to pursue his dreams for the time being, but 
DACA was also intended to be a temporary solution. Since President 
Obama established the program, Republicans have waged a relentless 
campaign--many of them--to overturn DACA and deport these Dreamers back 
to the countries they may not even remember. Now this program is 
hanging by a thread in the courts, and DACA recipients like Edon are 
being forced to live in fear and uncertainty every single day.
  Last September, a Federal judge in Texas declared the DACA Program 
illegal. Though the decision left in place protections for current DACA 
recipients--and there are almost 600,000 of them--while an appeal is 
pending, they live in constant fear that the next court decision will 
upend their lives.
  Court decisions have also prevented any new Dreamers from registering 
for the program. This means that, without congressional action--if we 
do nothing, if we continue to do nothing--hundreds of thousands of 
Dreamers who are ready to serve in their communities across the country 
may never have that opportunity.
  Studies have estimated that, if DACA were to end, we would lose 1,000 
U.S. jobs every day for the next 2 years. Business owners in my State 
often tell me that they need more workers. So the question I ask my 
colleagues today and ask America: Can we afford to lose 1,000 jobs a 
day from young people who grow up here, went to school here, stood up 
in the classroom every morning and pledged allegiance to that flag, 
believing it was their flag and their future? I think not.
  When he was President, Donald Trump tried to end the DACA Program. 
The first time I ever met Donald Trump was the day he was inaugurated 
as President. There was a luncheon, and I was invited to it. I went up 
to him, face-to-face in conversation personally, and I said: I want to 
tell you something. My priority is to cover these Dreamers, these DACA 
recipients, and give them a chance in America.
  He leaned over and said: Don't worry. We are going to take care of 
those kids.
  Well, he took care of them for sure. He tried to end the program 
altogether, with no protection for these young people. And, as a 
candidate, he has threatened to round up and deport undocumented 
immigrants, like this young man whom I just described.
  We can no longer stand idly by while extremist judges and politicians 
toy with the future of these young people who have never known life in 
this country formally as legal citizens. We in Congress should protect 
Dreamers like Edon right now. I urge my colleagues to reach out to 
Dreamers in their States to learn more about these talented young 
people.
  I have given these speeches on the floor. As I said, this is the 
141st young person I have described. I have yet to have a 
disappointment where they came back and said: Oh, Senator, that young 
man, that young woman you just described got on the other side of the 
law and did something terrible.
  It has never happened. These young people are good people. They 
deserve as much chance as our children to become part of this Nation's 
future.
  They are business owners, teachers, parents, athletes, scientists, 
nurses, healthcare workers, musicians, and so much more. Would America 
be better if they were gone? I think not. It is clear that they are an 
important part of our future and an important part of our American 
life.
  It is time to get to work and pass the Dream Act once and for all. It 
is the right thing to do, and it is long overdue.
  I yield the floor.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Hawaii.