He supports increasing H-1b’s to 500,000. My God....
First, this happened back in 2013 -- not yesterday -- when the gang of 8 were pushing their comprehensive immigration reform with their 'path to citizenship'.
Cruz came out solidly against that immediately and totally against any illegal entry or any attempt to make illegals legal. The quote often used against him begins "secondly...expand legal immigration.." Folks should ask, "If this is secondly, then what is firstly?"
Firstly, in disputing the comprehensive bill, he said absolutely ZERO illegal immigration. Secondly, he said that any shortfall in workers would be made up on the LEGAL side of immigration.
Now, he has fully supported Senator Sessions who has connected the job market and the illegal alien problem.
So, what we have is a senator who'd been in office for 5 months saying zero illegal immigration and any shortfall would be made up ONLY with legal immigrants and legal visas. I believe this is the actual proposed amendment by Cruz. It clearly is focused on shortfalls. See E (2)(b) http://www.judiciary.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Cruz4-(MDM13526).pdf "have at least 2 years experience in an occupation designated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as experiencing a shortage of labor throughout the United States."
I actually support that....for SHORTFALLS.
Here's an article from the time:
http://www.texastribune.org/2013/05/08/cruz-files-border-security-anti-amnesty-amendments/
Cruz Files Amendments to Immigration Reform Measure by Julián Aguilar
May 8, 2013 9
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz has jumped into the immigration reform fray by filing a slew of amendments that call for additional fencing on the border and that block a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
The Texas Republican's move comes as the U.S. Senates Judiciary Committee begins a weeks-long mark-up process on the omnibus immigration reform bill authored by a bipartisan coalition of senators known as the Gang of Eight.
Cruz, who was called a schoolyard bully by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., earlier this week, said his amendments were part of a pragmatic approach to moving forward on a divisive issue.
There is widespread, bipartisan support for fixing our nations broken immigration system, and we should approach it by addressing those areas where we can reach agreement so that we actually have a chance of passing an effective bill into law, Cruz said in a statement.
The freshman senator also filed a measure that would prohibit local, state and federal governments from doling out entitlement benefits to the millions living in the country illegally. His amendments are in concert with a plan his conservative colleagues have embarked on that would end with stronger border-security policies than those introduced last month by the Gang of Eight. That plan outlines a 13-year path to citizenship for the estimated 11.2 million people living in the country illegally. That road can only begin, however, when certain border security measures are met, including a 90 percent effectiveness rate for deterring illegal entries, defined as the number of apprehensions and turnbacks in a specific sector divided by the total number of illegal entries.
Cruzs amendments would mandate that the Department of Homeland Security triple the number of U.S. Border Patrol agents on the southwest border, and quadruple equipment, including cameras, drones and helicopters, during the same time frame. The border security amendment also mandates that if the goals are not met within three years, the departments budget will be slashed by 20 percent and that money would instead be diverted in the form of block grants to agencies in Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and Arizona for border security.
Cruzs amendments also include a measure to expand legal immigration by reforming the high-skilled temporary worker program.
Americas Voice, a progressive, pro-immigration-reform coalition, was quick to rebuke Cruzs efforts as part of its Good, Bad and Ugly review of amendments.
An amendment from Senator Ted Cruz would prohibit anyone who had been undocumented for any period of time ever from becoming a United States citizen in the future, Frank Sharry, the groups executive director, said in a statement. This would not only destroy the path to citizenship in the Senate bill the popular heart of an immigration reform solution but also turn its back on one hundred years of precedent in immigration policy.