Posted on January 25, 2006

House Republican Cites Guest-Worker ‘Amnesty’

Stephen Dinan, Washington Times, Jan. 25, 2006

Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr., the House point man on immigration, yesterday said that a guest-worker program like the one proposed by President Bush is amnesty and that he cannot accept it in a final immigration bill.

“A guest-worker program that applies to illegal aliens already here is an amnesty,” the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee said in an interview with The Washington Times.

As the chief House negotiator in any House-Senate conference committee on immigration, he said voters will not accept a plan that amounts to amnesty, and said Mr. Bush’s proposal would simply push the problem down the road.

“It seems to me that if you give these people the temporary cards, and the president talked a little bit about that yesterday out in Kansas, whether they are three-year cards or six-year cards or any other term, how do you get them to go back home when they expire?” he said. “We end up simply postponing the decision on what to do about illegal aliens until the end of the validity of these cards.”

He also said when Congress and the White House agreed in December 2004 to increase the U.S. Border Patrol by 2,000 agents a year, then two months later the president only funded 210 positions, it “was embarrassing both to the administration and those of us who fought for increased assets for border protection in the intelligence bill and then were let down.”

The Wisconsin Republican was a driving force behind last year’s House immigration-enforcement bill, which calls for nearly 700 miles of border fence, requires employers to verify employees’ Social Security numbers and allows border county sheriffs to enforce immigration laws.

He said he would prefer that Congress make sure border and interior enforcement is in place before a guest-worker program begins to operate.

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Full text of interview with Rep. James Sensenbrenner Jr.