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Rep. Luis Gutierrez |
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Why We
Should Welcome McConnell's Demand
for Hearings on Rescinding 14th
Amendment
WASHINGTON
(By
Congressman
Luis
Gutierrez)
August 5,
2010
The "your
papers,
please"
hysteria
spreading
through the
Republican
Party has
reached a
new low.
Now, they
want to
corrupt the
U.S.
Constitution
to promote
their
opposition
to
immigrants
and
immigration.
Senior
leaders in
the House
and Senate
are
introducing
legislation
and calling
for hearings
to explore
whether we
should
change the
U.S.
Constitution
to ensure
that more
people in
the United
States are
denied
citizenship
or legal
immigration
status.
Specifically,
Senate
Minority
Leader Mitch
McConnell
joined an
array of
Republican
lawmakers
who feel we
should
examine
whether to
rescind all
or part of
the 14th
amendment to
the
Constitution
to prevent
some
children
born in the
U.S. from
being
granted U.S.
citizenship.
The
pro-life,
pro-family
Republicans
are now
pro-neonatal
detention
and
deportation.
It isn't
enough to
drive out
the people
not born
here, now
they want to
drive out
the ones
that were.
Actually, I
agree with
Senator
McConnell.
We
absolutely
should hold
hearings as
soon as
possible to
discuss
whether we
should amend
the U.S.
Constitution
to make
newborns
deportable.
We need a
high-level
national
discussion
in both
Houses of
Congress on
the issue of
whether to
station
federal ICE
agents in
every
maternity
ward and
delivery
room right
between the
OB-GYN and
the
expectant
father.
Imagine a
United
States where
every birth
initiates an
investigation
to determine
the
citizenship
and
immigration
status of
each parent.
Let's have
the hearing
so we can
take careful
notes when
the
Republican's
witness
explains how
this
government
intrusion
into
maternal and
child health
burdening
our health
care system
and
discouraging
pregnant
women from
seeking
medical care
(while
perhaps
discouraging
claims of
paternity)
is justified
to secure
our borders
and protect
the core
liberties of
America. I
would love
to hear the
opening
remarks of
Judiciary
Committee
Members
Lindsey
Graham in
the Senate
or Lamar
Smith in the
House
broadcast
live from
coast-to-coast
on C-SPAN. I
can hear it
now. "Mr.
Chairman, I
would like
to express
my support
for a full
federal
background
check and
proof of
citizenship
for every
precious
human life."
While we are
at it, I
think we
should
subpoena
prominent
Republicans
like
Governor
Bobby Jindal
of Louisiana
and former
Senator Pete
Domenici of
New Mexico
to explain
how they
have ruined
our country
with their
automatic
U.S.
citizenship.
Under at
least some
of the
legislative
proposals
supported by
the
Republicans,
neither one
would be
citizens
because one
or more of
their
parents were
not
permanent
legal
residents of
the U.S. at
the time of
their birth.
Let's get
Olympic Gold
Medalist
Henry Cejudo
and NASA
Astronaut
Jose "Astro
Jose"
Hernandez on
the witness
stand to
defend all
that they
have robbed
from the
United
States by
usurping
U.S.
citizenship.
At long
last, the
GOP has come
up with the
legislative
strategy to
guarantee
that no man
or woman can
rise from
humble
origins,
with a
father who
is legally
present on a
student
visa, to sit
in the Oval
Office as
President of
the United
States.
I really
want to hear
the
Republican
argument.
Let's hear
why the 14th
amendment,
which
guarantees
citizenship
and equal
protection
under the
law
regardless
of the race
or
nationality
of your
parents, is
a law whose
time has
come and
gone. Please
explain to
the American
people how
the 14th
amendment
that
resolved the
issue of
African-American
citizenship
after
emancipation
and was the
critical
underpinning
of the civil
rights
movement in
the United
States,
ought to be
cast off now
because the
parchment
paper it is
written on
has grown
yellow and
curled. Just
the
expressions
on the faces
of my
colleagues
in the
Congressional
Black Caucus
during such
a hearing
would make
the whole
exercise
worth it to
me.
The federal
government
won a
preliminary
injunction
against
Arizona's
SB1070
immigration
law on the
grounds that
the federal
government's
authority
over
immigration
matters
preempts the
states from
such
intrusions.
Well, in for
a penny, in
for a pound,
I say. I
think the
Senate and
the House
ought to
call
immediate
hearings as
soon as we
reconvene in
September to
put the
Republican's
immigration
proposals up
against
Democratic
ones and see
which side
is serious
about rules,
enforcement,
legality and
cracking
down on
employers.
Which side
is for
immigrants
taking
personal
responsibility
and getting
right with
the law and
which side
is just
blowing
smoke in an
election
year.
Madam
Speaker, Mr.
Majority
Leader, and
distinguished
Chairmen and
Chairwomen
of the
committees
of
jurisdiction,
I rise to
respectfully
request that
you call
their bluff.
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