STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 3009 – Enforce the Law for Sanctuary Cities Act
(Rep. Hunter, R-CA, and 44 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 3009. This bill fails to offer
comprehensive reforms needed to fix the Nation's broken immigration
laws, undermines current Administration efforts to remove the most
dangerous convicted criminals and to work collaboratively with State and
local law enforcement agencies, and threatens the civil rights of all
Americans by authorizing State and local officials to collect
information regarding any private citizen's immigration status, at any
time, for any reason, and without justification.
The
Administration continues to believe that it is critical to fix the
Nation's broken immigration system through comprehensive commonsense
legislation that builds on existing efforts to strengthen border
security, cracks down on employers hiring undocumented workers,
streamlines legal immigration, and offers an earned path to citizenship
for undocumented immigrants to get right with the law if they pass
background checks, contribute to the Nation's economy by paying taxes,
and go to the back of the line. While the Senate passed comprehensive
legislation with strong bipartisan support over two years ago that would
do just that, the House of Representatives failed to take any action.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, that legislation would
also grow the Nation's economy by 5.4 percent and reduce Federal
deficits by nearly $850 billion over 20 years. The Administration
continues to urge the Congress to address all of the problems with the
Nation's broken immigration system and take up commonsense legislation
that will offer meaningful solutions to those problems.
The
Administration also believes the most effective way to enhance public
safety is through sensible and effective policies that focus enforcement
resources on the most significant public safety threats. The
Administration has put in place new enforcement priorities that do just
that, focusing limited resources on the worst offenders – national
security threats, convicted criminals, gang members, and recent border
crossers. The effectiveness of these new priorities depends on
collaboration between Federal, State, and local law enforcement. Every
day, the Federal government fosters State and local collaboration
through a variety of mechanisms, including policies, programs, and joint
task forces. The Department of Homeland Security's Priority
Enforcement Program (PEP) enables Federal immigration enforcement to
work with State and local law enforcement to take custody of individuals
who are enforcement priorities, including public safety and national
security threats, before those individuals are released into
communities. PEP is a balanced, commonsense approach to enforcing the Nation's immigration laws. It
replaced the Secure Communities program, which, by establishing a
“one-size-fits-all” approach to State and local cooperation with Federal
immigration enforcement officials, discouraged some localities from
turning over dangerous individuals to DHS custody. Secure Communities
was embroiled in litigation and widely criticized for undermining State
and local community policing efforts. PEP builds collaboration between
Federal, State, and local law enforcement that allows for the most
effective enforcement while enhancing community policing and trust. The
Congress should give PEP a chance to work, instead of displacing that
collaborative approach—which prioritizes the worst offenders—with the
coercive approach of this bill, which makes no such differentiation.
Finally,
the bill would condition Federal money on State and local governments
allowing their law enforcement officials to gather citizenship and
immigration status information from any person at any time for any
reason. The Administration believes that such blanket authority would
threaten the civil rights of all Americans, lead to mistrust between
communities and State and local law enforcement agencies, and impede
efforts to safely, fairly, and effectively enforce the Nation's
immigration laws.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3009, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto this bill.
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