The Hill
By Julian Hattem
October 1, 2015
Lawmakers
are drawing partisan battle lines over the Obama administration’s call
to allow tens of thousands of Syrian refugees into the U.S.
In
a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing on Thursday, multiple
Republicans appeared skeptical of the administration’s plans to fully
vet the new refugees headed toward
the U.S. and worried about the strain on American resources.
“We
just need to be aware that when we talk about the cost of the program —
and we have a billion-dollar cost — we’re not talking about the new
stress on Medicaid, food
stamps, hospitals, the housing allowances that they may be entitled to
and other costs of that kind,” said Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), the
head of the immigration subcommittee and a critic of expanded
immigration.
“Then we have the difficulty of being able to screen the applicants effectively.”
Democrats,
meanwhile, welcomed the administration’s plans and in some instances
pushed for the U.S. to open its doors even wider.
“We
are talking about real lives and real people,” said Sen. Dick Durbin
(D-Ill.), who has called for a dramatic expansion in the number of
refugees allowed into the U.S.
“Do we have any obligation in the United States to face this? I think we do.”
Thursday’s
hearing was the first since the Obama administration announced its
intentions to allow at least 85,000 refugees into the U.S. next year —
an increase from 70,000
last year — and 100,000 the year after that. Only a fraction of those
new immigrants will come from Syria.
The refugee crisis has dominated politics in Europe, but has so far been slow to rear its head on Capitol Hill.
If
the Senate subcommittee is any indication, however, the White House
plans could face increased scrutiny from Republicans. The decision is
largely an administrative
one, though Congress can exact demands on the White House through the
funding process.
Republicans
appear ready to tie the refugee crisis to Democrats’ long-standing push
to reform the country’s immigration laws, which was a nonstarter in the
current Congress.
Sen.
Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) brought up a February incident in which a person
who had been granted special immigration status that prevented him from
being deported allegedly
killed four people in Charlotte, N.C.
“It’s not specific to this, but it speaks to the agencies working together,” he said.
More
than 4 million Syrians have fled their home country in the four years
since a civil war broke out. The influx of refugees in neighboring
countries has led to massive
camps that have had strained the governments of Jordan, Turkey and
others.
More recently, streams of people fleeing into Europe have overwhelmed borders and vexed political leaders.
The
U.S. has provided the largest amount of financial support to support
the Syrian refugees but has only allowed roughly 1,600 into the country.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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