WASHINGTON — The Senate is poised to approve a military-style buildup along the U.S. border with Mexico,
doubling the number of Border Patrol agents on the ground and tripling
the number of drones overhead — a $30-billion plan designed to win the
votes of as many as 15 Republican senators for the immigration reform bill.
The plan would add so many new agents to the Border Patrol
— 20,000 — that if all were deployed at once, they could be stationed
roughly every 250 feet along the border, stretching from the Pacific
Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico.
Spending that amount — more than four times what senators initially
had proposed — would also be a boost to defense contractors and an
economic stimulus for border communities, creating thousands of jobs
that could raise home prices and spur consumer spending around border
security stations.
The proposed "border surge"
at a time of budget austerity and record low numbers of illegal
crossings had even backers expressing doubts. But they said it would
provide political protection to allow Republicans to vote for a measure that remains unpopular with many of their constituents.
"This is a surge — a border surge. We've practically militarized the border," said Sen. Lindsey Graham
(R-S.C.), who helped negotiate the new agreement, which was unveiled
Thursday. "We've had two waves of illegal immigration. We can't stand a
third."
The plan worked out over the last several days appeared to loosen a
logjam in the Senate that had threatened to undo months of work on the
most comprehensive immigration overhaul in a generation. And although
neither the political left nor right was fully pleased with the deal,
some key figures on both side said it could represent the best chance to
pass a bill.
"I'm not sure throwing money at something not working well is a
solution, but we need a solution," said Eliseo Medina,
secretary-treasurer of the Service Employees International Union. "But
having said that, it is now about trying to figure out: How do we also
make sure we get something through that fixes this god-awful problem of a
broken immigration system?"
Sen. Richard J. Durbin
(D-Ill.), assistant majority leader and a leading liberal, said the
deal involved "big numbers — some would say even overkill numbers — but
it becomes more and more difficult for Republican senators to argue
they're not getting enough force on the border."
Civil rights groups decried the proposal as a threat to people who
live near the border and unnecessary at a time when deportations of
immigrants are at record highs.
"This massive deployment of force would be simply devastating for
border communities," said Joanne Lin, a legislative counsel at the
American Civil Liberties Union.
Many border-area residents are already frustrated with the number of
roadside checkpoints and what some see as a militarization of the
boundary many cross daily to conduct business and visit relatives.
Budget hawks were stunned at the price tag, even though the costs
would be paid by new taxes and fees on immigrants seeking legal status
and employers seeking guest-worker visas.
The White House had no comment on the proposal, said spokesman Bobby
Whithorne. White House officials met with Democratic senators Thursday
and were reviewing the compromise.
Backers of the immigration overhaul have argued they need a robust
Senate vote to spur action in the House. The Republican majority in that
chamber has shown little interest in allowing the 11 million immigrants
in the country illegally to achieve permanent legal status, let alone
have a chance to become citizens.
With the tentative agreement on border security in hand, the Senate
is expected to complete work on the immigration bill next week.
Until now, only a handful of Senate Republicans have supported the bill. The border proposal, drafted by Sens. John Hoeven (R-N.D.) and Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), is aimed to win over those who are open to the citizenship path.
Those Republican senators have urgently sought provisions that would
allow them to say they had strengthened the border. Initially, they
wanted to delay the citizenship process until the border was fully
secure, a goal the bill's original sponsors — a group of four Democrats
and four Republicans — said was not achievable and would leave
immigrants in a gray zone indefinitely.
Instead, under the agreement, immigrants who pay fees and fines and
remain in good standing would be able to receive permanent legal status
after 10 years, through green cards.
But they could obtain that status only after these five border
security objectives were met: deployment of the new Border Patrol
officers; completion of 700 miles of border fence; operation of a new
E-Verify program that all employers would have to use to verify the
legal status of new hires; expansion of a new exit visa system to record
departures at all airports and seaports; and deployment of technology
such as drone-mounted Vader radar surveillance.
Some Republican senators justified the dramatic increase in border security by pointing to an analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office,
which projected that if the immigration bill passed, the United States
would gain 7 million additional unauthorized immigrants over the next
decade. The budget office report, however, was based almost entirely on
the expectation that some people who entered the country legally would
overstay their visas, not that people would cross the border illegally.
The proposal would substantially increase the use of surveillance
drones flying over the southern border, boosting the number from six to
18. "If you're worried about drones, you lost big here. We're going to
have a lot of drones on the border," Graham said.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.) this week called drones "the greatest threat to the privacy
of Americans." Feinstein changed the bill in committee to restrict the
use of drones in California to within three miles of the U.S.-Mexico
border. In other Southwest border states, drones could fly within 100
miles of Mexico, as long as they had approval from the Federal Aviation
Administration.
The proposal would almost double the 21,000 agents already arrayed on
the border — a move that could degrade the force, according to the
union that represents agents.
At 41,000 agents, the Border Patrol would be nearly twice the size of the California National Guard and larger than the FBI, which employs about 36,100 people.
The Border Patrol doubled in size between 2005 and 2013, a period
that also saw a rise in corruption investigations and accusations of
misuse of force. During that period, the agency "recruited at swap meets
and other events that aren't known for having the best candidates for a
law enforcement job," wrote Shawn P. Moran, vice president of the
National Border Patrol Council representing 17,000 border agents and
staff, in an email.
Obama administration officials want senators to define the 20,000
additional agents broadly enough to allow the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security
to hire additional customs officers, investigators, prosecutors, pilots
and other border officers, as well as Border Patrol agents.
Even some Republicans who want a tougher border chafed at the size of the proposed expansion.
Sen. Susan Collins
(R-Maine), whose support will be sought for the proposal, said she did
not like the idea of doubling the patrol. "I don't think that is the
answer," she said. "I think it would be extremely expensive, and I think
we need more of a reliance on technology."
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-immigration-border-20130621,0,7134317,full.story
Obama is no kings don’t like to be constrained. But all government should be.Obama is Pathological Liar, He is an Ideological Liar because the true objectives of his fundamental transformation of the United States are incompatible with American democracy and tradition Obama devotion to the Machiavellian dictum of "the ends justify the means" and lying as an instrument of government policy have been the tools of political extremists throughout history.
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