Congressman Smith Composes Enforcement List
03/07/2013
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Congressman Lamar Smith (R-TX) has compiled a fine to-do list of immigration enforcement strategies that would help if they were the implemented instead of a multi-trillion-dollar amnesty trough of goodies for lawbreaking foreigners. Among the items, several are suggested upgrades to existing laws plus a couple new ones, including ending the odious anchor baby magnet.

There could have been a few more. Let me add my suggestions:

=> Lower the overall number of legal immigrants to 100,000 annually, maximum. That should be more than enough to serve the interest of the American people.

=> Lower the number of refugees to 10,000, since many, if not most, are scammers or economic immigrants. The refugee ceiling in 2011 was 80,000 despite America’s terrible economy. And because of their extreme diversity, refugees are high maintenance persons costing taxpayers a lot of money.

=> Punish illegal entry. First time gets a month in the slammer required. Each additional entry would increase incarceration by six months. The prisons wouldn’t be expensive hotel accommodations designed by Raza lawyers, but rather Sheriff-Arpaio-style jails with tents and 40-cent bologna sandwiches — cheap!

=> End dual citizenship. No more polygamously fractured national loyalty.

=> End immigration from Special Interest Countries that are said to “promote, produce, or protect terrorist organizations or their members.” Why welcome spies and enemies? Aliens from the officially unfriendly nations (also called Specially Designated Countries, SDCs) get extra security checks to enter or immigrate. Why allow any immigrants from those places when presumably plenty of nice people want to become Americans?

=> End the diversity visa, period. We have more than enough diversity already and don’t need to import more.

Okay, now for Rep. Smith’s list:

Immigration enforcement key to success, by Lamar Smith, USA Today, March 4, 2013

Amnesty advocates argue that our immigration system is broken and can only be fixed by legalizing millions of illegal immigrants. But they ignore the real problem plaguing our system today: lack of enforcement of laws already on the books.

America has the most generous immigration system in the world, admitting one million legal immigrants every year. There is a right way and a wrong way to enter our country. The right way is to play by the rules and wait your turn, not cut in front of the line and ignore the law. Better border and interior security will benefit American taxpayers and workers and make our communities safer.

But even if the border itself is secure, that doesn’t mean that individuals won’t continue to gain legal entry and remain in the country illegally. That happens when those on student, visitor or business visas don’t return home after their short-term visa has expired. They account for 40% of all illegal immigrants, more than four million people. Border security must go hand-in-hand with interior enforcement. Congress can take numerous actions to reduce illegal immigration at the border and inside the country. Some of these merely require that the government enforce existing law:

• Require employers to only hire legal workers. This will reduce the magnet of the easy availability of jobs that entices many to enter illegally. And it will reduce the competition for scarce jobs that hurts legal workers. More than 425,000 employers have signed up voluntarily for E-Verify that ensures that prospective hires are legally authorized to work in the U.S. And 99.5% of legal workers are confirmed immediately.

• Increase work-site investigations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement to make sure employers are hiring legal workers. This will protect jobs for unemployed or underemployed Americans. Unfortunately, work-site enforcement is down 70% under the Obama administration.

• Implement an entry-exit system using biometrics (such as fingerprints) to identify those who entered on a temporary visa and overstayed their visit. They comprise almost half of all illegal immigrants. This administration has ignored the law requiring them to set up this system.

• Increase border resources and personnel so that fewer illegal immigrants will enter undetected. For every person apprehended today, others escape notice. The Government Accountability Office has determined that only 6.5% of the southern border is under “full control” of the Border Patrol.

• Refuse to issue visas to residents of countries that won’t allow their citizens to be returned home after they have committed crimes in the U.S. Many of these individuals are now released back into our communities where they often commit additional crimes.

• Expand the Secure Communities program, which identifies illegal immigrants who have been arrested for crimes. These offenders should be detained and then sent home, not released. The Obama administration allows some cities to ignore this law.

• Stop giving automatic citizenship to children born to illegal immigrant parents, which represents about 10% of all births in the U.S. today. At least one parent should be in the country legally. Automatic citizenship rewards illegal parents and often tempts them to enter the U.S. just to give birth.

Even if Congress enacts all these provisions, that still doesn’t guarantee they will be implemented. All laws are useless unless they are enforced. And it’s the president who can choose to enforce or not enforce laws, as we have seen many times.

Regardless of what initiatives are taken or what legislation is enacted, the flow of illegal immigrants will never stop. Some foreigners will not want to wait in line, others will take their chances and work illegally, and others will risk using fraudulent documents.

What’s more, if current legislative proposals to legalize millions of illegal immigrants are approved, amnesty advocates threaten to file lawsuits delaying enforcement provisions. So the enforcement measures will be tied up in court, but the amnesty provisions will go into effect immediately. The result is amnesty but no enforcement of border security. And as we’ve learned, amnesty without enforcement only leads to more illegal immigration.

Amnesty advocates promise that they’ll secure the border and enforce our laws once they get what they want — legalization of those in the country illegally. We’ve heard those promises in the past — and they were never kept.

We should not reward those who have broken our laws with amnesty. Even if we did, there is no guarantee that the border or interior would become more secure.

Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, the former chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, now serves on the immigration subcommittee.

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