by Phyllis Schlafly Eagle Forum April 10, 2013
The amnesty bill that the Gang of Eight has
been working on in secret has sprung some leaks so we can identify several
major flaws. The Senate Budget Committee reports that there is nothing in the
plan to comply with the federal law that states that any immigrant is
“inadmissible” who is “likely at any time to become a public charge.”
That is the text of Section 212 of the federal
Immigration and Nationality Act. The Gang of Eight appears to be willing to
allow those who illegally entered the U.S. to obtain legal residence without
demonstrating that they will not become a public charge, and after they get a
green card they can access the 79 federal welfare benefits and anti-poverty
programs.
The Senate Budget Committee staff estimates
that costs to the U.S. taxpayers could be $40 billion a year just for Medicaid
and ObamaCare. Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation believes that the net
cost of amnesty would eventually top $2 trillion.
One in three immigrant-headed households
already participates in at least one major welfare program. Green card holders
are already eligible for Medicaid, TANF, Supplemental Security Income, child
care assistance, food stamps, and a variety of other welfare benefits and
public aid programs.
Who will protect the taxpayers against this
gigantic raid on our money and our children’s future?
A second roadblock on the way to success for
the Gang of Eight is the public’s demand than the route to legalization
absolutely must include border security in order to prevent the entry of a new
flood of illegals. But Homeland Security officials just told Congress that they
still don’t have any way to effectively measure border security.
Three years ago, the Obama Administration
scrapped the yardstick that was supposed to measure how many miles of the
border are under “operational control.” But top Customs and Border Protection officials
told Congress in March that the new system they are now working on won’t be
ready for use any time in the near future.
A third setback for the Gang of Eight’s
amnesty scheme was this week’s front-page headline stating “A sharp drop in job
growth sows new concerns.” The average Joe in America can’t support the idea of
giving permanent residency to 11 million foreign job-seekers when our own
labor-force participation is lower than it’s been in 25 years.
Do we really need more high-school dropouts looking
for U.S. jobs? Don’t we have enough Americans trying to support their families
who can’t find full-time jobs or jobs that pay as well as the jobs they held
ten years ago? Why should available jobs go to aliens who broke our laws
instead of to American citizens?
A fourth difficulty for the amnesty crowd is
Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy’s (D-VT) chilly brushoff of Senator
Marco Rubio’s call for thorough legislative consideration of any immigration
bill, with time for public comment and consideration of amendments. Leahy plans
to bypass the usual committee process, hold only a single hearing, and push the
bill through the Senate “with all deliberate speed,” which all recognize as
woefully inadequate to deal with dozens of amnesty issues such as how
legalization of millions of illegals will impact unemployed Americans, the
short- and long-term cost to the taxpayers, and metrics for establishing border
security.
Leahy appears to be planning to imitate the
Nancy Pelosi model of dealing with legislation, namely, the procedure she used
to pass ObamaCare: first pass the bill, and after that, Members of Congress and
the American public can read it and find out what is in it. We hope Marco Rubio
will say, that’s unacceptable.
Another roadblock that no one is yet
discussing is that, according to a new Rasmussen survey, the majority of
American voters (54 percent) do not think that potential U.S. citizens should
be allowed to maintain any dual citizenship. If you listen to what illegal
aliens are saying, it’s rather clear that most plan to retain significant
loyalty to their homeland, and some even claim that Mexico rightfully owns our
southwest states.
In any discussion of amnesty, it would be a
good idea to remind all illegal aliens, especially those waiting for the Gang
of Eight to complete their job, that U.S. citizenship requires applicants to
swear this solemn oath: “I hereby declare, on oath, that I absolutely and
entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince,
potentate, state or sovereignty, of whom or which I have heretofore been a
subject or citizen.”
That oath requires people claiming U.S.
citizenship to abandon all fidelity to their home country. That oath is a good
way to sort out the ones who really want to be Americans.
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