August 5, 2020 - Issue: Vol. 166, No. 139 — Daily Edition116th Congress (2019 - 2020) - 2nd Session
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UNANIMOUS CONSENT REQUEST; Congressional Record Vol. 166, No. 139
(Senate - August 05, 2020)
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[Pages S4899-S4901] From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov] UNANIMOUS CONSENT REQUEST Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I have come to the floor again today to speak about an obscure section of immigration law that has a direct impact on the lives of literally millions of people living and working in the United States. I am here to speak about the plight of immigrant workers who are suffering because of a serious problem in our immigration system, known as the green card backlog. Many of these immigrants are essential workers helping to lead the fight against COVID-19. We have just heard tributes on the floor to these healthcare heroes from Senators on the other side. [[Page S4900]] This green card backlog, which I speak to, puts them and their families at risk of losing their immigration status and being deported from the United States. Under current law, there are not nearly enough immigrant visas--also known as green cards--available each year. As a result, many immigrants are stuck in crippling backlogs for years, waiting and praying for the moment when their number comes up. Close to 5 million future Americans are in line, waiting for these green cards, including 1 million immigrant workers and their families. Despite this number--5 million--there are only 226,000 family green cards and 140,000 employment green cards available each year. These backlogs are really hard on families. They are caught in immigration limbo. What happens to the children is particularly awful. Children in many of these families age out while the parents are waiting for the green cards. What does that mean? They reach the age of 21, and then these children, as adults, face deportation because they are no longer under the age of 21 by the time the green cards are available. The solution to the green card backlog is so clear: Increase the number of green cards. I have introduced legislation known as the RELIEF Act with Senator Pat Leahy and Senator Mazie Hirono. The RELIEF Act would increase the number of green cards to clear the backlogs for all immigrants waiting in line for green cards within 5 years. The RELIEF Act would protect aging out children who qualify for a green card based on the parents' immigration petition. This RELIEF Act is not new; it is based on the bipartisan 2013 Comprehensive Immigration Reform bill. I know a little bit about it. That bill was written by eight Senators, and I was one of them--four Democrats, four Republicans. We worked for months. We took the bill through the Senate Judiciary Committee. We faced 200 amendments, I believe, and then brought it to the floor, subject to even more amendments. At the end of the day, that bill passed with a strong bipartisan vote of 68 to 32 on the floor of the Senate. But Republicans, who controlled the House of Representatives, refused to even consider this comprehensive immigration bill. If they had, we wouldn't be here today. That bill and the provisions we added to it eliminated the green card backlog. Unfortunately, some of my colleagues on the Republican side are still unwilling to increase the number of immigrant visas even by one. They want to keep these immigrant workers on temporary visas where they are at risk of losing their immigration status and being deported. The senior Senator from Utah, Mr. Lee, introduced a bill, S. 386, known as the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act, to address the green card backlog. I have a basic concern with Senator Lee's bill. S. 386 includes no--no--additional green cards. Without additional green cards, S. 386 will not reduce the green card backlog. Don't take it from me; listen to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service. Here is what they say about Senator Lee's legislation: ``S. 386 would not reduce future backlogs compared to current law.'' This is not a partisan group; it is the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service. S. 386 would not reduce future backlogs. Despite my concerns about Senator Lee's bill, I told him I was willing to sit down and work in good faith to see if there was something we could agree on. Last December, we reached an agreement--a good one. Republicans object to increasing the number of green cards, and, as a result, even our agreement--the amendment we agreed to--wouldn't reduce the green card backlog. But it was a good bill that we proposed. Let me highlight two key provisions of this agreement. We protect immigrants and their families stuck in the backlog. Immigrant workers and their immediate family members would be allowed to ``early file'' for their green cards. This was a proposal from Senator Lee that I thought was good and I was willing to support. That doesn't mean they would receive their green cards early, but they would be able to switch jobs and travel without losing their immigration status. That, to me, was only sensible. Early filing adds a critical protection that was not in Senator Lee's original bill. It prevents the children of immigrant workers from aging out of green card eligibility so they will not face deportation while they are waiting for a green card. Our agreement also would crack down on the abuse of H1-B temporary work visas. The amendment we agreed to would prohibit a company from hiring additional H1-B workers if the company's workforce were more than 50 employees and more than 50 percent of them were temporary workers. These shell companies were created for outsourcing Americans jobs and abusing the H1-B visa process. I know because Senator Grassley-- Republican of Iowa--and I introduced this reform years and years ago when this abuse became so obvious. It targets the top recipients of H1- B visas, which are outsourcing companies that use loopholes in the law to exploit immigrant workers and to offshore American workers' jobs. Two weeks ago, I came to the floor of the Senate to ask that we pass this agreement. Unfortunately, at that moment, Senator Lee objected. Instead, he offered a revised version of our December agreement, including changes that are required by the Trump administration. First, Senator Lee wants to remove a provision known as the hold harmless clause. That assured immigrants who are already waiting for a green card--sometimes for years--would not lose their place in line because Congress changed the rules in the middle of the game. Second, Senator Lee wanted to delay for 3 years the effective date of this 50-50 rule to crack down on outsourcing companies. I don't believe we should give these companies that are outsourcing American jobs and exploiting immigrant workers a free pass for 3 years. Third, Senator Lee wanted to delay for years early filing for people who are stuck in the green card backlog. Any children who would age out in the meantime would lose their chance for a green card and be subject to deportation. Those changes suggested by the Senator from Utah were unacceptable, but because there are so many lives at stake here, families at stake here--and I know the intensity of emotion behind this issue--I was determined to keep working to see if we could find some common ground. Last Tuesday, I sent Senator Lee another compromise offer. The Senate Republican leader is planning to recess the Senate in a few days, so I thought it was important to come to the floor today to try to pass this proposal before the Senate convenes. Let me be clear. This isn't how we are supposed to make laws in the Senate. Last year, I sent a letter--joined by every Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee--to the senior Senator from Texas, John Cornyn, chair of the Immigration Subcommittee. We asked for the regular order of business in the Senate, which so seldom occurs now. We asked Senator Cornyn, as chair of the Immigration Subcommittee, to hold a hearing on this complicated legislation that addresses the green card backlog. We wanted them to include in the hearing consideration of Senator Lee's bill and my legislation, the RELIEF Act. We requested a hearing with witnesses, a markup, a bill, a vote in the committee, and a vote on the floor. It is almost like something called the U.S. Senate used to be. This would help the Senate to understand, during the course of this hearing and debate, the impact of each of these proposals and to pass legislation that would actually fix the backlog. That really is how the Senate used to work. I know it is hard for newer Members to believe it. The Immigration Subcommittee is certainly not too busy to take up this hearing. For this session of Congress, which began a year and a half ago, the Immigration Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee has held one hearing--one. Unfortunately, Senator Cornyn rejected our request. This leaves me no other option but to bring this proposal directly to the Senate floor. Let me explain what my amendment would do. First, it would ensure that the children of immigrant workers do not age [[Page S4901]] out while waiting for a green card. This provision would not increase the number of green cards. It would not provide any special benefits. It would simply allow children of immigrant workers to keep their place in line for a green card and to be protected from deportation until they can get their green card. Second, my amendment would delay the bill section that changes the distribution of green cards by 1 year. This provision, which Senator Lee actually proposed earlier this year, would not replace the hold- harmless provision; however, it would allow processing time for immigrants with pending applications to get their green cards. Third, my amendment would allow for immediate implementation of the 50-50 H-1B visa rule. I was told that the purpose of delaying it 3 years was to protect those currently working for these companies. So instead of the 3-year delay, my amendment would exempt renewals for current H-1B employees, which gives current employees the chance to apply for early filing without creating a loophole for outsourcing firms. What I offered Senator Lee after months and months of deliberation and negotiation was a good-faith effort to find common ground. There are so many lives at stake. So many families are following this debate because it literally will decide the fate of each of these individuals who are applying for the green cards and members of their family. It is heartbreaking to meet these families who have been waiting for years for a green card and to realize that the limitations of our system today make it so difficult. Many of these are good, hard-working people in America who are doing the right thing. In my hometown of Springfield, IL, there are physicians whom I have met and talked to personally who have driven hundreds of miles to plead their case with me. This one physician brought his young daughter; I think she was about 12 years old. I haven't forgotten her to this day. She traveled 200 miles to beg me to try to help. That is why I came in with this amendment in an effort to protect her and give her family a chance to be part of America's future. I will now request unanimous consent to pass my amendment. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Judiciary Committee be discharged from further consideration of H.R. 1044 and the Senate proceed to its immediate consideration; further, that the Durbin substitute amendment at the desk be considered agreed to; the bill, as amended, be considered read a third time and passed; and the motion to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table with no intervening action or debate. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cotton). Is there objection? The Senator from Utah. Mr. LEE. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I want to thank and appreciate the work done by my friend, my distinguished colleague, the senior Senator from Illinois. Senator Durbin and I have worked on many issues. We spent a lot of time working on this particular bill. In our most recent round of negotiations, he made a number of suggestions, and we incorporated many of those. I wish we could incorporate all of them. For the reasons that I gave a couple of weeks ago when we went through this, there are some of them that I unfortunately can't agree to because they would result in our inability to proceed. On that basis, I object. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard. The Senator from Utah ____________________
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