[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 151 (2005), Part 7]
[House]
[Pages 9200-9201]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                            A FREE AMERICAN

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Kuhl of New York). Under a previous 
order of the House, the gentleman from Washington (Mr. McDermott) is 
recognized for 5 minutes.
  Mr. McDERMOTT. Mr. Speaker, last night, the House passed House 
Resolution 193 as a suspension bill. For people who may not know, 
suspension bills are meant to be noncontroversial measures the House 
typically passes unanimously.
  I voted no. Let me tell you why. Because it was a protest vote meant 
to encourage freedom and liberty for all Americans. Let us start with 
what it said.
  H.R. 193 is a resolution that says in part, ``expressing support to 
the organizers and participants of the historic meeting of the Assembly 
to Promote the Civil Society in Cuba on 20 May 2005 in Havana. Whereas, 
Fidel Castro's terrorist regime has continued to repress all attempts 
by Cuban people to bring democratic change to Cuba and denies 
universally recognized liberties, including freedom of speech, 
association, movement and the press.''
  I could go on but there is no need to. It is all right there in what 
I just read. We decry liberties denied Cubans while a Cuban-American in 
my city of Seattle is denied the right to go to Cuba to visit his son 
by the U.S. government.
  Remember the grandstanding on Elian Gonzales? We wag our fingers at 
Fidel and shout about Cubans being denied liberty at every moment. 
Well, we are denying the right of an American to travel to Cuba for a 
few days to see his son. How hypocritical is that?
  I am talking about the plight of Sergeant Carlos Lazo. He came to 
America from Cuba in the early 1990s floating on a raft in the ocean. 
He risked his life for a chance to come here. Talk about the 
quintessential story about risking everything to call America home. 
Carlos Lazo is the stuff of books and movies and news coverage. He 
wants none of it. He just wants to see his children in Cuba. And the 
United States government will not let him go.
  Floating on the raft in the ocean, that is what Carlos Lazo did. That 
is about as courageous as it gets. So he arrives in America. He moves 
to the State of Washington. A man grateful to be alive, he determines 
to embrace his new country and do everything within

[[Page 9201]]

his power to give back. He joins the Washington National Guard. Over a 
year ago, his unit dispatched to Iraq. Now Carlos serves his country in 
one of the most dangerous places in Iraq, Fallujah, as a medic. He 
serves on the ground in Iraq for a year.
  When his duty is over, Carlos wants to go see his kids still in Cuba. 
Carlos goes to Miami, but he is denied the right to travel to Cuba. He 
is denied the right to board an airplane bound for Havana. He saw them 
in 2003, and he is told by the government: You cannot see them again 
until 2006. Three years.
  Sergeant Lazo, who proudly served America, who risked his life to get 
here and risked his life to defend liberty, is now a man whose liberty 
has been denied. He cannot see his children in Cuba until the President 
lets him go.
  When will Carlos be able to visit his children in Cuba? I ask that 
the Speaker, because the administration is in denial, call the White 
House. They want to perpetuate a bureaucracy and a failed policy, not 
assist an American who wants the sum total of what every parent wants, 
the right to see their kids.
  The government has in place a policy which denies the basic liberties 
of an American hero, and we have not lifted one finger in this House to 
help Carlos Lazo. The Secretary of Defense is not interested in him. 
The White House is not interested in its citizen. The White House and 
this House are only interested in wagging fingers at Fidel Castro.
  Carlos Lazo is a man who embodies everything Americans stand for, 
courage, determination, quiet thanks from a man grateful to have made a 
new life and a new home. And now Carlos is a man who cannot be united 
with his family. Carlos is a man who did not want to be anything but a 
quiet, grateful American and is forced to become a man in the 
spotlight, hoping someone will pay attention, hoping someone will let 
him see his kids.
  H. Res. 193 is a suspension bill that would have us suspend 
disbelief. Carlos deserves the thanks of a grateful Nation and the 
immediate assistance of this administration and the Congress. We ought 
to add his name to H. Res. 193 so he can travel. We should do that and 
make a resolve that the United States of America, which sees itself as 
a beacon of liberty in the world, extend its support to Carlos Lazo and 
will facilitate his immediate travel to Cuba to be reunited with his 
kids.
  Anything less than fighting and defending the liberty of Carlos Lazo 
from the State of Washington is the work of a Congress long on 
hyperbole and short on action in defense of liberty.
  Mr. Speaker, call the Secretary of Defense before the day is out. I 
bet he is still in his office. Send Carlos Lazo to Cuba, to his sons in 
his former homeland, so he can be a free American.
  If you want to make a real statement about what it means to be free, 
let one American be free, free to travel, free to be reunited with his 
children, free to show the people of Cuba, firsthand, what freedom 
means in this country.
  Free to show Cubans firsthand that America does not have to prevent 
its citizens from leaving the country in order to keep them.
  Mr. Speaker, use your office to intercede and let this House stand as 
a beacon of freedom and liberty for every American, not just some 
Americans.
  So long as Carlos Lazo is forbidden from visiting his children in 
Cuba, America can only be known as the land where some are truly free 
and others are truly denied liberty.
  Send Carlos Lazo to Cuba.

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