Rep. Lamar Smith Lambastes Amnesty Bill

author Published by Joe Jenkins

Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX), the Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee, has issued a statement condemning Rep. Gutierrez’s comprehensive amnesty bill, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America’s Security and Prosperity Act of 2009 (H.R. 4321):

 

Our policies should put American workers, American taxpayers, and American citizens first, not those who are in the country illegally. This is the kind of legislation that foreign governments would promote, not the U.S. Congress.
 
The amnesty bill does not hold any surprises and lays out the same vision for amnesty that President Obama and the Democrats have promised to the illegal immigrant lobby. The bill proposes to reduce illegal immigration by making all illegal immigrants legal!

 
Allowing millions of illegal immigrants to stay and take jobs away from citizens and legal immigrants is like giving a burglar a key to the house. Illegal immigrants currently occupy eight million jobs. Those stolen jobs rightfully belong to citizens and legal immigrants. We could cut the unemployment rate in half simply by enforcing immigration laws!

 
The bill won’t pass because the American people oppose rewarding lawbreakers, which then encourages even more illegal immigration.

Please continue to check the NumbersUSA homepage for more stories on this comprehensive amnesty bill.

Take Action

Your voice counts! Let your Member of Congress know where you stand on immigration issues through the Action Board. Not a NumbersUSA member? Sign up here to get started.

Action Board

Donate Today!

NumbersUSA is a non-profit, non-partisan organization that relies on your donations to works toward sensible immigration policies. NumbersUSA Education & Research Foundation is recognized by America's Best Charities as one of the top 3% of well-run charities.

Donate

Immigration Grade Cards

NumbersUSA provides the only comprehensive immigration grade cards. See how your member of Congress’ rates and find grades going back to the 104th Congress (1995-97).

Read More