Late last week, as the Washington Post first
reported, Kennedy slipped a sneaky provision into the
Senate's omnibus appropriations bill that would have
completely cut off funding for the national security
registration system. [Senate
Votes to Halt INS Registration Program, By Edward
Walsh, Washington Post, January 25, 2003]
Kennedy's legislative sabotage would have also forced
Attorney General John Ashcroft to turn over to the
Senate appropriations committee sensitive information,
including all documents: "used in the creation of the
NSEERS program, including any predecessor programs;
assessing the effectiveness of the NSEERS program as a
tool to enhance national security; used to determine the
scope of the NSEERS program, including countries
selected for the program, and the gender, age, and
immigration status of the persons required to register
under the program; regarding future plans to expand the
NSEERS program to additional countries, age groups,
women, and persons holding other immigration statuses
not already covered; concerning policy directives or
guidance issued to officials about implementation of
NSEERS, including the role of the FBI in conducting
national security background checks of registrants . . .
and explaining how information gathered during
interviews of registrants will be stored, used, or
transmitted to other Federal, State, or local
agencies.''
Kennedy tucked this piece of pro-terror mischief into
an amendment, sponsored by Arizona's GOP Senators John
McCain and Jon Kyl, aimed at restoring funding for a
larger foreign visitor tracking system. That entry-exit
system was
mandated in
1996 and is supposed to be in place by 2005.
Congressional sources told me it was a "mistake" that
the Kennedy language defunding NSEERS was included. They
blamed haphazardness and confusion during last-minute
negotiations for the appalling oversight.
Translation: Somebody screwed up.
Kennedy's opposition to NSEERS is well-known. He
signed a letter last month, along with Rep. John
Conyers, D-Mich., and Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis.,
demanding that the program be suspended.
Immigration lawyers, ethnic lobbyists and civil
liberties extremists aligned with Kennedy have been up
in arms over NSEERS, despite the fact that the program
is in line with alien registration systems around the
world—and despite the fact that not a single illegal
alien has actually been kicked out yet as a result of
being caught through NSEERS.
Yes, you read that right. Although the program has
successfully barred new criminal alien threats from
entering America, NSEERS cannot overcome the broken
deportation system supported by Kennedy and Company.
"No one has been deported yet," Justice Department
official and NSEERS expert Kris Kobach noted at a
press briefing earlier this month. That's because
the shadowy immigration court system of hearings and
endless appeals enables illegal aliens and criminal
aliens to be bonded or paroled out of federal custody
during the deportation process—and then disappear. (Read
more at
www.deportaliens.com, run by an anonymous
Justice Department whistleblower.)
NSEERS is worthless if
this
catch-and-release system remains in place. Teddy
Kennedy and his staff know this
dirty little secret. Will the Republicans ever get
on the ball and fight back?
Michelle Malkin is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click here
for Peter Brimelow’s review.
Click here
for Michelle Malkin's website.
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