Johnson, Collins Reintroduce Sweeping Legislation to Address Abuse of Immigration Laws
Washington, DC,
June 21, 2019
U.S. Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04) and House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Doug Collins (GA-27) reintroduced the Asylum Reform and Border Protection Act (H.R. 3360) to address and counter widespread abuse of our existing immigration laws. The bill makes a number of necessary improvements to prevent fraud and abuse in the asylum system and to ensure it is reserved for those truly fleeing persecution from their home countries. In just the first six months of Fiscal Year 2019, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) made more apprehensions at the Southern border than in the entirety of Fiscal Year 2018. JOHNSON RELEASED THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT:
COLLINS RELEASED THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT:
Key Components of the Asylum Reform and Border Protection Act: Strengthens asylum process to protect legitimate claims and prevent fraud:
Reforms immigration parole law to prevent executive overreach: The bill specifies the precise instances in which the DHS parole program can be used. The Obama administration strained the parole program, going well beyond the intent of Congress, to admit entire classes of otherwise inadmissible aliens and release large numbers of detained aliens. Action is needed to prevent such abuses in the future. Provides asylum seekers the ability to apply for benefits from safe third countries: The bill grants DHS the power to remove asylum seekers to safe third countries where they would have access to a full and fair procedure to apply for asylum without the current necessity for bilateral agreements with those countries. This would allow the return of apprehended Central Americans to Mexico, for example, where they could apply for asylum. Protects taxpayer dollars: While the Immigration and Nationality Act has long prohibited taxpayer-funded attorneys for aliens in removal proceedings, the Obama administration used taxpayer dollars to pay lawyers for unaccompanied alien minors. The bill makes the prohibition more explicit so that no administration can disregard the law and provide taxpayer-funded counsel to unlawful immigrants. |