Posted on 03/17/2005 7:03:53 AM PST by OXENinFLA
Mrs. HUTCHISON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of the amendment be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The amendment is as follows: (Purpose: To fully fund the level of Border Patrol Agents authorized by National Intelligence Reform Act of 2004 and as recommended by the 9/11 Commission)
On page 23, line 16, increase the amount by $352,400,000.
On page 23, line 17, increase the amount by $317,000,000.
On page 23, line 21, increase the amount by $35,400,000.
On page 9, line 15, decrease the amount by $352,400,000.
On page 9, line 16, decrease the amount by $317,000,000.
On page 9, line 20, decrease the amount by $35,400,000.
Mrs. HUTCHISON. Mr. President, this is an amendment cosponsored by myself and Senator Ensign. Senator Ensign has done so much work in this area on the intelligence reform bill, assuring there would be 2,000 authorized Border Patrol agents. We also have as cosponsors Senators Domenici, Cornyn, McCain, Kyl, and Feinstein. Mr. President, I would like to be notified at the end of 10 minutes, after which I will yield the rest of the time to the Senator from Nevada.
Earlier this month, FBI Director Mueller told Congress that people from countries with ties to al-Qaida are crossing into the United States through our porous border with Mexico.
Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security James Loy recently said that intelligence reports suggest al-Qaida is considering using the Southwest border to infiltrate into the United States, either with falsified documents or by crossing the border in other illegal ways.
We have today 11,000 Border Patrol agents for the borders between Mexico, the United States, and Canada, as well as in the Border Patrol centers that are throughout our country. It is clearly not enough.
Mr. President, 97 percent of illegal intruders are filtering through the Southwest border. But they do not stay in the South. They go throughout our country.
The Border Patrol does an amazing job. We applaud their work. But we need to give them more help. Recent stories and intelligence reports show that terrorists are planning to use our border, and it should be a wakeup call.
Since 2001, 1,300 agents have been added to the force. But we have 6,900 miles of border with Canada and Mexico. My State of Texas alone has over 1,200 miles of border with Mexico. In most places there are no fences. In Texas, the Rio Grande River can sometimes be waded across or is completely dry.
We are seeing an increase of 137 percent in immigrants who are from countries other than Mexico. These immigrants, which are called OTMs, ``other than Mexicans,'' are coming into our country in the largest numbers we have ever seen. But due to a lack of resources, they are often caught and released, or they are not caught at all.
Recognizing our serious border vulnerability, Congress passed the intelligence reform bill last year and authorized an increase of 10,000 Border Patrol agents over 5 years. It included provisions to add 8,000 detention beds and 800 additional interior investigators. Unfortunately, the budget before us only allocated enough to cover 210 agents, 143 investigators, and 1,920 beds for detention.
The Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection recently said:
We do not have enough agents; we don't have enough technology to give us the security we need.
Let me give you some examples of recent happenings.
In Detroit, Mahmoud Youssef Kourani was indicted in the Eastern District of Michigan on one count of conspiracy to provide material support to Hezbollah. Kourani was already in custody for entering the country illegally through Mexico and was involved in fundraising activities on behalf of Hezbollah.
The two groups of Arab males were discovered by patrol guards from Willcox, AZ. One field agent said:
These guys didn't speak Spanish, and they were speaking to each other in Arabic. It's ridiculous that we don't take this more seriously. We're told not to say a thing to the media.
This is a field agent for the Border Patrol.
Last July, in Burlington, VT, police raided an international syndicate that forced Asian women to work as sex slaves. The women told investigators they had been smuggled from Asia to Mexico, entering the United States through Arizona, Texas, and other States. They ended up in Vermont.
Take the example of the capture of terrorist suspect Jose Padilla. The Justice Department says Padilla and an accomplice planned to enter the United States through Mexico to blow up apartment buildings in major cities such as New York.
Or the case of suspected al-Qaida sleeper agent Mohammed Junaid Babar, who told investigators of a scheme to smuggle terrorists across the Mexican border. He is tied to a terror plot to carry out bombings and assassinations in London.
Further stories indicate there are real concerns about terrorists entering our country through the southern border.
Along the Mexican border there have been stories of suspicious items picked up by local residents, including Muslim prayer rugs and notebooks written in both Arabic and Spanish. These items came from OTMs and a subcategory called special interest aliens, who are illegals coming from terrorist-sponsoring countries.
Intelligence reports suggesting that 25 Chechen terrorism suspects have illegally entered the United States from Mexico have refocused attention on a porous border from which many believe the next major attack on Americans could come.
Patrol agents told one Arizona newspaper that 77 males ``of Middle Eastern descent'' were apprehended in June of last year in 2 separate incidents. All were trekking through the mountains and are believed to have been part of a larger group of illegal immigrants. Many were released pending immigration hearings.
Also last July, an Egyptian man United States authorities described as one of their most wanted smugglers of humans was arrested on charges of operating a ring that illegally brought people from Egypt and other Middle Eastern countries to the United States. The indictment says Abdallah and his associates would direct people seeking to reach the
United States to travel to one of several Latin American countries, and from there to Guatemala. They would then be transported to America through Mexico in return for payments of thousands of dollars in smuggling fees.
The amendment we are offering tonight will add $315 million to the President's request for the Border Patrol. This will provide for the training and equipping of 2,000 agents. This would be the full amount authorized and will have a dramatic impact on the security-related problems we have on the border.
In order to maintain a fiscally responsible bill, and not increase the top cap of discretionary spending, we are offsetting this increase with an equal reduction in the international affairs section of the budget because protecting our borders from foreign threats is an international affair.
Today, with my colleagues Senators Ensign, Domenici, Cornyn, McCain, Kyl, and Feinstein, I am calling on Congress to do more than add 210 Border Patrol agents that are in the underlying budget. We are asking for the full contingent authorized of 2,000. This is still not enough. And I hope we will be able to come back next year and get up to the full 2,000 again.
But the warning flag has gone up. We must heed the warnings we have been given. Every incident I mentioned is a call to the United States to make sure that our borders with Mexico are secure. We need more Border Patrol agents and more detention facilities to make our borders secure.
The people of our country deserve this security, and our amendment will take one step in the right direction. I hope my colleagues will work with me to pass this in the budget and then later in the Appropriations bill. We must do everything to heed the warning call we have gotten.
Mr. President, I yield the rest of our time to the Senator from Nevada, who has also worked very hard on this amendment. I appreciate very much his cosponsoring this amendment with me today.
For the record, a little over 10% think that and don't have the aptitude to comprehend the truth.\
To be fair, Howlin didn't claim that 70% thought a guest worker program was the "best way" to solve the illegal alien problem. She said " Almost SEVENTY PERCENT of the MEMBERS of this forum approve of SOME KIND of worker's program."
The problem I have with that claim is that the poll she cited only adds up to 59.7% support for some kind of guest worker program.
The polls you and she have cited aren't mutually exclusive. For example, I support a Tancredo style guest worker program, but believe the first order of business is to beef up and enforce existing laws, which was also Howlin's first priority.
Well, I thank you for pointing that out, not that it makes any difference to the posters on this thread.
Of course, you realize that the exact same thing happens to the ones of us who don't agree with the militant stance taken by some on these threads, right?
Ok .. I'll admit I was a bit off on my thinking with regard to the Border Agents in Iraq
By that link you posted Fatalis .. it sounds like some there sent to TEACH Iraqis to better patrol the borders over there and keep the terrorists from coming in
Do you have a problem teaching Iraqis to help prevent terrorists from Iran and Syria that want to harm OUR soldiers?
I don't have a problem with teaching Iraqis about border control in principle, but since in the bigger picture our own border enforcement is inadequate, there is sort of an irony there when we're diverting CBP agents to Iraq while President Bush is seeking to underfund new BP hiring by 90%.
FYI .. I asked a question
But let's not get facts in the way of name calling
Did we send all our BP's over there?
Did we send half our BP's over there ?
Or did some go over there to TEACH the Iraqis on how to stop the terrorists from trying to harm and kill our troops??
IMO ... I don't see a problem in sending some BP over there to help.
Maybe others do .. but I don't
Yes, and it's just as wrong...and I've sent FR mail to those who attack people like that. This is a very contentious subject, and folks get a little wound up on this subject at times. As someone who has had a couple close friends victimized by illegal aliens (hit and run, no insurance), and gang bangers,(friend's son shot in the chest, killed) it's a very emotional subject for me.
But I'm trying to be civil. Please note, that I've never called you slanderous names, like "illegal alien lover", etc, and I don't think you are.
But in all sincerity, I think there are many folks who automaticaly go into attack mode, whenever they perceive President Bush to be criticized, for anything. This border issue is one area of the Presidents policies, that many think he is failing. I have talked with several police officers in my area, and they just scratch their heads, when trying to figure out his border policy, especially when we are at war with a fanatical religious sect hell bent on destroying the U.S.
"To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public." ` Teddy Roosevelt
She knew about the updated poll and still decided to base her assumption on the original poll. As evidenced by post #117 as well as this thread Free Republic guest worker poll is busted
In essence only 10 percent of the 5000+ polled here support any sort of guest worker program.
You mean because you don't like the results?
Have you so quickly forgotten that you can get the poll numbers you want by the way it's worded?
I know you haven't called me those names; but they sure float around here like gnats.
I'm still waiting for a response OR apology for this one:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1364652/posts?page=84#84
Nope, because the original was ambiguous at best, so Jim posted an updated version, unless of course you are saying that the 5000+ that voted on the updated poll do not exist? You did note the question #5 on the updated poll correct? But just in case you missed it.
Some form of guest worker program 10.4%.
She knew about the updated poll and still decided to base her assumption on the original poll. As evidenced by post #117 as well as this thread Free Republic guest worker poll is busted
Howlin cited the second and more valid poll, though her 70% figure overstates things by 10%. I should know which poll has the more valid wording, since I wrote the thread about the first busted poll that you linked above.
In essence only 10 percent of the 5000+ polled here support any sort of guest worker program.
You've misunderstood the poll results because you haven't paid attention to the question. You're getting your "only 10%" figure from a poll that asked Which of the following is the best way to solve the illegal immigration problem?
Neither Howlin nor I believe that a guest worker plan is the "best way" to solve the problem, though I support a guest worker program as part of a comprehensive solution. I'm not clear right now where Howlin stands on the various guest worker plans.
Free Republic Opinion Poll: Do you approve of the president's guest worker plan?
Member Opinion | |||
---|---|---|---|
Definitely not. A guest worker program will not work. | 38.9% | 1,041 | |
Yes, but illegal aliens must go home first and apply for entry. | 28.4% | 761 | |
Maybe, but it needs a lot of work. | 18.8% | 503 | |
Yes, will be fine as is or with minor changes. | 8.1% | 217 | |
Undecided, other, pass. | 5.9% | 157 | |
100.1% | 2,679 | ||
Ok, one more time: Would you approve of a guest worker program as planned or with amendments:
|
|||
Member Opinion | |||
I would approve of a guest worker program if it requires illegals to go home first and apply for entry | 27.0% | 938 | |
I would not approve of a guest worker program of any kind | 20.4% | 710 | |
I would approve of a guest worker plan similar to Tancredo's | 15.2% | 530 | |
I approve of the president's guest worker plan as is or with minor changes | 8.8% | 305 | |
I might approve of a compromise guest worker program with some of Tancredo's ideas incorporated | 8.6% | 298 | |
I don't like the wording of this poll and decline to participate | 7.7% | 266 | |
Immigration from Mexico should not be allowed under any circumstances | 7.5% | 262 | |
Undecided, other, pass | 4.8% | 167 | |
100.0% | 3,476 | ||
Those are the results when the question is ONLY about guest worker's programs. And I only counted members because I don't care about people who log off and vote. |
Agreed. In addition, I just saw a report on FNC that showed kids getting out of school and getting on a bus and a trolley to go home to Mexico. What is up w this??? This is the 1st time of heard of it happening. So, in addition to paying for education, healthcare, etc., etc. for illegals, we're now paying for education for Mexican children???? This is ridiculous unless their parents or the Mexican government is contributing $1.2k per child (I think that's what the said the CA education costs are).
Almost SEVENTY PERCENT of the MEMBERS of this forum approve of SOME KIND of worker's program.
What part of that, which is what see based her threads on here, did I misunderstand?
I support some sort of guest worker program because if we don't have one, nothing will be done.
Big difference there, the 1st states the obvious, the second states that 70 percent of all people who are on this forum are for a Guest Workers program, which is 100 percent wrong.
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