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| IMMIGRATION CHALLENGE | |
September 6, 2001 |
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Three Congressmen debate Mexican President Fox's call for an overhaul of U.S. immigration policy. |
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We're now joined by three Congressmen who follow immigration issues: Thomas Tancredo of Colorado, who chairs the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus; Silvestre Reyes of Texas, head of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus; and Chris Cannon of Utah, a member of the House subcommittee on immigration. Well, Congressman Tancredo, you just heard the president discuss a solution that Congress can accept. By your views, what does that look like? |
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| Guest worker programs vs. amnesty | ||||||||||||||||||||
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REP. THOMAS TANCREDO: Well, it's an interesting question and one that we keep wrestling around up here. We have said and certainly I have said over and over again that if anybody can prove that there is a significant need for workers in the United States that we do not have here, that Americans will... For jobs that, quote, I always hear this, Americans will not fill for whatever reason, if that is the case, then we can devise a guest worker program that can do two things: Bring workers in and protect their rights so that they won't be exploited as they often are today by people who are trying to get them to work for lower wages and fewer benefits. On the one hand, we can also control the process and they can go home after a period of time, whatever the contractual arrangement is for. If you can come up with a good guest worker program that does those two things, I will be very willing to look at that. RAY SUAREZ: Does that guest worker program imagine handling first those people who are already here, or you would ask that hey go home first?
RAY SUAREZ: Well, Representative Reyes, let's move to you next. The Hispanic Caucus met with President Fox during his visit here. Immigration was certainly discussed. Where do you and the caucus come down on how these matters should be handled now? REP. SILVESTRE REYES: Well, first of all, I should tell you that I spent 26-and-a-half years working with the United States Border Patrol -- the last 12 years as a chief patrol agent in South Texas and in El Paso. So I know the issue of border control, immigration and INS, like the back of my hand. I can perhaps help my colleague here understand the dynamics of what we're trying to work through and perhaps look back at the 1986 law that basically was very effective and we can show statistically that the employer sanctions was an effective tool. The problem was that Congress never followed through in giving INS the resources to enforce employer sanctions in the interior of the United States. Today we've got a dilemma where people that entered subsequent to the '86 law have been working here, have been paying taxes, are members of our community, and we've got essentially the same situation that we had in 1986.
RAY SUAREZ: Congressman, just to see if I understand you correctly, you would like see a guest worker program like your colleague proposes but also a machinery set up to regularize, to legalize the status of the millions who are already here?
We're a nation that was built by immigrants and immigration. It's a realization that we have to be inclusive. And that's perhaps where Congressman Tancredo and I disagree. But again we need a proposal, we need the White House to step forward. There is a way to get this done this year if we can work through the details. |
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| Legalizing illegal immigrants | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Congressman Cannon, you're often referred to as the man who helps explain George W. Bush's views on immigration to your colleagues in the House of Representatives. What's the Bush position and is Thomas Tancredo right when he refers to amnesty as a word that nobody wants to use anymore?
But the fact that we're dealing with Mexico, that the two presidents are dealing together, the fact that Mexico has come so far in the last few years has developed so greatly, that NAFTA has become an incredibly successful process, the adoption of technology in Mexico, the advances in business, the advances in the rule of law, frankly President Fox pointed out that his election represents a major change in Mexico itself -- and I believe that's the case -- means that we can do different things and new things. And so I don't know that we can do much by the end of the year, as he had hoped. But I think in the legislative process, if we drop divisive terms and focus on what we need in the American economy and the opportunities that we have with our neighbor and biggest trading partner, Mexico, second biggest trading partner, that we have great opportunities to change the dynamic, which currently results in many people being worried for their safety, for the integrity of their families, for the opportunity to continue at the work that they're doing as opposed to being jerked out of their situation and taken home.
REP. CHRIS CANNON: I think we're dealing with a new concept here. We're not dealing with amnesty. It's not that we're avoiding the word; it's that we're changing the concept. The concept is to have a process whereby people who are here today and who are working... we just don't have enough Americans to do the jobs - and in fact, frankly, most economists believe that we -- that much of our recent growth in this economy has depended upon those many people from many different countries who have come here illegally. So we need to have a process whereby those people can regularize-- that's a word that I don't even understand myself-- but they need to be in a situation where they don't have to worry about being jerked out of that.... RAY SUAREZ: Be made legal. REP. CHRIS CANNON: Yeah, through a process. RAY SUAREZ: Do you propose that this not be a cost-free proposition because some of your colleagues in the Republican Caucus have been upset about the notion that you could regularize your status after breaking the law to get here. REP. CHRIS CANNON: I think the most legitimate concern of those people who oppose immigration, generally speaking, in America, the most reasonable response or rationale for those people is that if someone comes illegally and you give him a process to become legal, that is somehow rewarding appropriate behavior. We want to avoid that. That means there has to be a penalty associated with it. There has to be proof of good citizenship and contribution to society. There also has to be some other penalty that goes along. And frankly I don't know what those penalties are. People talk about monetary penalties. There are all kinds of things we can do I suppose.
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| Rewards and penalties | ||||||||||||||||||||
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RAY SUAREZ: Congressman Tancredo, would that help any sort of regularization provision to acknowledge that this journey began an illegal act? REP. THOMAS TANCREDO: Acknowledging it has got nothing to do with it. When someone breaks the law, they can acknowledge they broke the law and there is a penalty to be assessed to that and not a reward. And by the way I use the word "amnesty" because I'm not as adept at obfuscation as perhaps some of my colleagues. I mean I call it exactly what it is. I know that terms like "regularization" and "earned legalization" have gained some cache, but it's only to avoid dealing with the reality of what we're talking about here. I mean, the tortured logic that my dear friend has just described that somehow or other we will not provide a reward for someone who has come into the United States and broken the law by giving them a legal status -- we just won't say we're doing it but, of course, we are! I mean, it's just as explain as the nose on your face that that's exactly what's happening and we can't do that. I'm astounded in a way that here we are, three members of the Congress of the United States, and two of us are trying to figure out ways to essentially ignore the laws that we pass. What an amazing and almost bizarre situation to be in. RAY SUAREZ: Well, Congressman Reyes just spent a long time trying to enforce those very laws. REP. THOMAS TANCREDO: I was just talking to him about that.
REP. THOMAS TANCREDO: I agree. REP. SILVESTRE REYES: We have a responsibility here but let's start by not penalizing people that are here working, paying taxes, that have kids in schools and a lot of them U.S. citizen kids. RAY SUAREZ: Well, Suarez: I'm going to have to stop you right there. This is certainly a conversation that's going to have to continue. And, Gentlemen, I want to thank you all for being here. REP. CHRIS CANNON: Thank you. REP. THOMAS TANCREDO: Okay, thank you very much. REP. SILVESTRE REYES: Thank you. |
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