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Commentary:
Statement of Chairman Patrick Leahy on Comprehensive Immigration Reform
The Honorable Patrick Leahy
United States Senator ,
Vermont
Statement of Chairman Patrick Leahy
"Comprehensive Immigration Reform"
Senate Judiciary Committee
February 28, 2007
I thank Secretary Gutierrez and Secretary Chertoff for agreeing to
appear before the Committee today. I hope their participation will
demonstrate the President's wholehearted commitment to working with us
to enact comprehensive immigration reform legislation this year. Without
the Administration's earnest engagement on this issue, our efforts are
likely to suffer the same fate they did last year. This Committee
reported a comprehensive immigration reform bill only to see Republican
congressional opposition stall that effort, prevent a House-Senate
conference and, instead, force through a bill calling for billions to be
wasted constructing a 700-mile fence along our 2,000-mile Southern
border. This year we have a renewed opportunity to do the right thing -
one which may not come along again.
By their votes in the most recent elections, the American people have
reaffirmed
America
's traditional place as a nation of immigrants. We are not
anti-immigrant or racist. We understand people seeking a better life for
their children and grandchildren as naturally as we do. Americans
understand that comprehensive immigration reform does not mean
criminalizing the hard work of law-abiding people, deporting millions of
families who have lived here for years or seeking to wall ourselves off
from our neighbors and the world around us. Thankfully, the politics of
fear did not succeed. Americans rejected the poisonous rhetoric of
intolerance in favor of a more confident, realistic and humane approach
that finds strength in diversity and human dignity.
If we are to reclaim
America
's promise, we need to keep our eyes on the core principles of
comprehensive reform. To his credit the President has called for
comprehensive legislation and "an immigration system worthy of
America
." Now he must demonstrate his commitment to those principles and
lead Republicans toward achieving that goal so that, not as Democrats or
Republicans but as Americans, we can honor our history as a nation of
immigrants and strengthen our future and leadership in the world.
The President has said that no one element of immigration reform can
succeed without a comprehensive approach. The Committee-reported bill
last year took a comprehensive approach. The Senate-based bill took a
comprehensive approach. The House-generated bill that the President
signed just before the election did not.
Our broken system has fostered incongruities from coast to coast -- from
our biggest cities to our smallest towns, and from our factories to our
farms. Reform is overdue. We must be realistic about the millions of
undocumented people in this country. We need to bring people out of the
shadows. When we provide opportunity for people to be responsible, the
vast majority will be and we will all be the better for it. We can and
should do everything necessary to protect opportunities for our domestic
workers. We need to reduce illegal immigration by reforming our
temporary worker programs to allow more access to the unfilled jobs and
unmet needs in our economy. These are not either-or propositions; we can
do both.
Dairying in
Vermont
is more than a job or an industry - it is a way of life. Our
agricultural economy depends on the hundreds of millions of dollars
dairy farmers bring to our state every year. But that way of life is
threatened when family dairies cannot find help to milk the cows,
deliver calves and keep up with chores. Finding help on the farm is
becoming increasingly difficult for hundreds of
Vermont
farms. Many have turned to migrant workers from
Mexico
and
Central America
. Currently,
Vermont
dairies are depending on an estimated 2,000 foreign workers. We know
there is something wrong with this hodge-podge arrangement, and we need
to do better. We need to bring order and common sense to a broken
system.
Vermont
dairy farmers should not have to choose between saving their family
farms and obeying the law.
The President has acknowledged that "you cannot deport 10 million
people who have been here working." He said at the Southern border
last August: "It's unrealistic. It may sound good in certain
circles and political circles. It's not going to work." He went on
to outline what he called "the best plan" for those here
illegally. He recommended saying to them: "If you've been paying
your taxes, and you've got a good criminal record, that you can pay a
fine for being here illegally, and you can learn English, like the rest
of us have done, and you can get in a citizenship line to apply for
citizenship. You don't get to get in the front, you get to get in the
back of the line." He called this a "reasonable way to treat
people with respect and accomplish what we want to accomplish, which is
to be a country of law and a country of decency and respect." I
agree, and those were precisely the elements contained in the Committee
and Senate bills last year.
Our mission must be to create an immigration system for the 21st Century
that honors the great history and tradition of our nation and secures
our future. What we must always remember is that immigrants are real
people who have families, and hopes, and dreams. In most cases, these
are people who want to contribute, who work hard, who are striving to
overcome the fortuitousness of where they were born. They contribute to
our armed forces and sacrifice to protect the freedoms we have and they
hope to enjoy. They contribute to our economy, to our lifestyle, and
help with our most important responsibility when they help raise
America
's children. As the grandson of immigrants to the
United States
, I will work to reaffirm the promise of
America
's lamp beside the golden door for the poor and oppressed.
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