MSNBC (Op-Ed)
By Vikram Singh
January 13, 2015
As
Congress prepares to vote Wednesday morning on a new Homeland Security
appropriation, the Republican leadership on Capitol Hill is continuing
to choose politics over
national security, holding the department’s funding hostage unless they
get their way on immigration. In the wake of increasing terrorist
threats like the attacks in Paris last week, it is reckless to punt on
the additional resources DHS requested for things
like border guards, customs agents, the Secret Service, and the Coast
Guard. Uncertainty about the year’s budget also makes it impossible for
DHS to plan for evolving issues, from terror threats to Ebola.
Instead
of finally holding a vote to fund this critical department, House
Republicans are attaching a series of poison-pill amendments to the
bill, all of which are designed
to stop President Obama’s recent executive actions on immigration from
moving forward. Even worse, House leaders are going after the entirety
of how the administration has pursued immigration and border
enforcement, hampering its ability to prioritize enforcement
on serious offenders, and potentially putting hundreds of thousands of
DREAMers who received temporary legal protection under the 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in danger of deportation.
This
strategy of attacking the administration’s enforcement policies is
mind-boggling—though not surprising, given the House’s inability last
year to even consider the
bipartisan Senate immigration reform bill, which included the largest
border security expansion ever—from members of the House who claim to be
border and national security hawks. Put simply, the president’s actions
on immigration will actually improve our
nation’s security.
The
fight against the president’s immigration policy would stop the
“Southern Border and Approaches Campaign,” which provides centralized
coordination for the multiple
national security agencies operating at the Southern Border, to help
them coordinate to stop unauthorized immigration and human and drug
smuggling. House Republicans are also trying to block a program which
would allow the family members of people who serve
in our armed forces receive temporary legal protection. Finally,
Republicans in the House have set their sights on destroying the
centerpiece of the new executive action that expands the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, and provides similar
protections to parents of U.S. citizen children who have been in the
country for at least five years. These change will cover as many as 5
million people.
How
does extending temporary protection to another 5 million people help
our nation’s security? It brings them out of the shadows. For years, our
broken immigration system
let 11 million people live in the United States with their identities
and backgrounds unknown to the government. Two-thirds of these people
have been here for more than ten years, off the books and hard to track.
To get a temporary reprieve from deportation
and a work permit, these 5 million people would undergo criminal and
national security background checks and register with the government.
That will let law enforcement waste less time and focus more resources
on real dangers like violent offenders and terrorists.
Republican
leadership in Congress promised to get things done and to not shut down
the government. Yet refusing to fund Homeland Security for a full year
stymies or shutters
important national security work and denies resources to the men and
women sworn to protect Americans every day. All to try and stop an Obama
policy reform that will actually make us safer.
Given
this past week’s terror attacks in Paris, ensuring that our nation’s
homeland security is fully funded is more critical than ever. It’s no
wonder that even Republicans
such as Rep. Peter King of New York, Mike McCaul of Texas, and Sen.
Lindsay Graham of South Carolina are calling into question the wisdom of
holding Homeland Security funding hostage. President Bush’s Homeland
Security Secretary, Tom Ridge, put it succinctly:
“I would be very, very disappointed if I were Secretary, and the
Democrats did it to me.”
Protecting
the safety and security of the country and our citizens is the
paramount responsibility of the federal government. Yet the agency
charged with that duty is
struggling for funding because the Republican Congress doesn’t like
President Obama’s immigration strategy. If Congressional Republicans
want to challenge Obama’s immigration policy, they should pass
immigration reform instead of playing politics with national
security.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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