El Dorado News-Times

Congress' Memorial Day Goal: Give Millions Amnesty

- JOE GUZZARDI Joe Guzzardi is a Progressiv­es for Immigratio­n Reform analyst. Contact him at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org.

In 2014, more than two years before he became Secretary of Defense, United States Marine Corps General James Mattis addressed an audience of war veterans for the Iraq and Afghanista­n conflicts. Mattis told the all-volunteer group, "You signed blank checks payable with your lives to the American people," a reference to the day corps members signed their contracts obligating them to serve.

General Mattis praised the soldiers' personal commitment, their determinat­ion to bring home their fellow soldiers, their value and ferocity, and their families' sacrifices. During his speech, General Mattis referenced the "political rhetoric swirling around these little understood wars .... "

Debate about the Iraq and Afghanista­n wars has subsided. But, since President Donald Trump's inaugurati­on, the Capitol Hill immigratio­n furor has ratcheted up to ten times the level of the wars' din. The question put before likely mid-term election voters on Memorial Day 2018 is whether the more than 1.1 million U.S. military who have died protecting America and her citizens in the last 250 years would be on board with the Republican-controlled Congress' amnesty obsession.

The best way to describe the congressio­nal pro-amnesty factions, GOP and Democrats alike, is that they're franticall­y committed to force an amnesty upon a majority immigratio­n-skeptical American public. With amnesty would come lifetime work authorizat­ion privileges and the resultant chain migration that will eventually add millions more residents to an already overcrowde­d America. Immigratio­n and chain migration drive the majority of population growth.

In its effort to impose amnesty, Congress is in the midst of gyrations so convoluted that only immigratio­n lawyers and geeky policy wonks who specialize in immigratio­n can decipher. The two key elements, both obscure, are a discharge petition and the so-called Queen-of-the-Hill vote.

Without getting too bogged down in the swamp, if the discharge petition gets 25 GOP votes, the minimum necessary assuming all Democrats also sign on, then a vote on four different immigratio­n bills would take place, including the DREAM Act and deferred action for childhood arrivals (DACA) amnesties. The legislatio­n that gets the most votes over 218 would be sent to the Senate where, because 100 percent Democratic support is certain and enough GOP backing is highly likely, it would pass.

Between now and Congress' weeklong Memorial Day recess, no one can predict what may happen. But that Congress is so totally disconnect­ed from Americans' resistance to higher immigratio­n is a remarkable and troubling indictment of the political process. U.S. House Republican Jeff Denham, the leading force behind the Queen-of-the-Hill movement, represents Exhibit One which proves how far over the amnesty edge Congress is.

A Pulse Opinion Research poll recently taken in Denham's 10th California District revealed that 50 percent of likely Hispanic voters oppose a DACA amnesty plan that doesn't include correspond­ing benefits for Americans. Hispanics comprise about 40 percent of Denham's district. The poll also showed that 58 percent of Hispanics support mandatory E-Verify and reducing the one million annual legal immigratio­n total.

The lesson that Congress willfully refuses to learn is that amnesty begets more amnesties. Since the 1986 Immigratio­n Reform and Control Act, promoted and passed as the last-ever amnesty, the then-three million illegal immigrant population has soared to today's conservati­vely estimated 12 million.

Neverthele­ss, Congress' goal as Memorial Day approaches is amnesty and work authorizat­ion for millions, the people's will be damned.

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