Today, Alabama's Senator Jeff Sessions, Chairman of refugees in the United States:
the Immigration Subcommittee,
issued the following statement regarding the House plan for resettling
Syrian and other regional
“The current proposal being considered in the House in response to the
President’s dangerous refugee plan – the American SAFE Act – fails to
defend the interests of the American people. It is based on a flawed
premise, as there is simply no way to vet Syrian refugees. Just over a
month ago, officials from the Department of Homeland Security admitted
before the Immigration Subcommittee that there is no database in Syria
against which they can run a check. They have no way to enter Syria to
verify the applicants’ personal information. And we know the region is
being flooded with false documents.
Moreover, when the
Administration was asked if Syrian refugees could end up coming to the
United States and joining ISIS like Minnesota’s Somali refugees, the
answer was blunt: ‘we can’t predict the future.’
Each year, the U.S.
permanently resettles more than 100,000 Muslim migrants inside the
United States. In just the last year, refugees and migrants allowed into
America from Bosnia, Somalia, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan,
Kazakhstan, Ghana, Kuwait and Bangladesh have been implicated in
terrorism. And, as we have seen, the U.S.-born children of migrants are
also at risk for radicalization.
Ignoring this reality, the
American SAFE Act allows the President to continue to bring in as many
refugees as he wants from anywhere in the world. With respect to Syria
and Iraq, the American SAFE Act requires only that the President direct
his Secretary of Homeland Security, Director of National Intelligence,
and FBI Director (all his appointees) to sign off on the
administration’s screening process – a process that the White House
continually asserts is adequate and ‘ensures safety.’ The plain fact is
that this bill transfers the prerogative from Congress to President
Obama and ensures the President’s refugee resettlement initiative will
continue unabated.
Of course, the President can easily veto the
measure as well. There is only one true check now against the President
going it alone: Congressional funding. In his annual budget request, the
President asked for more than $1 billion to fund the Refugee Admissions
Program. All Congress has to do is make clear that the President’s
funding request will not be granted unless he meets certain necessary
Congressional requirements – the first of which should be to make clear
that Congress, not the President, has the final say on how many refugees
are brought into the United States and from where.
Finally, the
House plan does not offset a single penny of increased refugee
resettlement costs. As currently structured, the House plan would give
the President the money he wants for refugee resettlement and then leave
taxpayers on the hook now and in the years to come for the tens of
billions of dollars in uncapped welfare, education, and entitlement
costs certain to accrue. Thus, in addition to the enormous welfare costs
– 91% of recent Middle Eastern refugees are on food stamps and 73%
receive free healthcare – we will also be taking money directly from
Americans’ Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds to provide
retirement benefits for refugees. The real costs of this refugee
expansion has not even been ascertained.
A recent analysis finds
that admitting 10,000 refugees to the United States presents a net
lifetime cost to taxpayers of $6.5 billion, meaning that under the
current plan to admit 85,000 refugees this fiscal year, taxpayers will
be on the hook for $55 billion. For the cost of resettling one refugee
in America, we could successfully resettle 12 refugees in the region.
Creating safe-zones in Syria and the region is a vastly more effective
and compassionate strategy. Such a proposal recently was put forth by
former Secretary of Defense Gates and General Petraeus, among others.
With immigration at a record high, deficits surging, wages flat-lining,
schools overcrowding, crime rising, and terrorism threats increasing,
it is time to place priority on protecting the safety of Americans and
their financial security. We face a real crisis. The Administration must
change its strategy to creating safe-zones and to accelerating actions
that can bring the fighting to a close. There is no other solution. The
solution is not to have the populations of all the Middle Eastern
countries move to Europe and the United States.
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Thursday, November 19, 2015
WHAT DOES OUR SENATOR SESSIONS THINK ABOUT BRINGING SYRIANS TO THE UNITED STATES?
Labels:
politics,
Senator Sessions
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