Since I took
office we've increased funding for border security by 60
percent, and our border agents have caught and sent home more
than 4.5 million illegal immigrants, including more than 350,000
with criminal records. Yet we must do more to build on this
progress.
This week I outlined my comprehensive strategy to reform our
immigration system. The strategy begins with a three-part plan
to protect our borders. First we will promptly return every
illegal entrant we catch at our border, with no exceptions. For
illegal immigrants from Mexico, we are working to expand an
innovative program called interior repatriation, in which those
caught at the border are returned to their hometowns, far from
the border, making it more difficult for them to attempt another
crossing. For non-Mexican illegal immigrants, we're changing the
unwise policy of catch and release to a policy of catch and
return, and we're speeding up the removal process.
Second, we must fix weak and unnecessary provisions in our
immigration laws, including senseless rules that require us to
release illegal immigrants if their home countries do not take
them back in a set period of time.
Third, we must stop people from crossing the border illegally
in the first place. So we're hiring thousands more Border Patrol
agents, we're deploying new technology to expand their reach and
effectiveness, and we're constructing physical barriers to
entry.
Comprehensive immigration reform also requires us to improve
enforcement of our laws in the interior of our country, because
border security and interior enforcement go hand-in-hand. In
October, I signed legislation that more than doubled the
resources for interior enforcement, so we'll increase the number
of immigration enforcement agents and criminal investigators,
enhance work site enforcement, and continue to go after
smugglers, gang members, and human traffickers. Our immigration
laws apply across all of America, and we will enforce those laws
throughout our land.
Finally, comprehensive immigration reform requires us to
create a new temporary worker program that relieves pressure on
the border, but rejects amnesty. By creating a legal channel for
willing employers to hire willing workers we will reduce the
number of workers trying to sneak across the border, and that
would free up law enforcement officers to focus on criminals,
drug dealers, terrorists, and others who mean us harm.
This program would not create an automatic path to
citizenship, and it would not provide amnesty. I oppose amnesty.
Rewarding law-breakers would encourage others to break the law
and keep pressure on our border. A temporary worker program will
relieve pressure on the border and help us more effectively
enforce our immigration laws.
Our nation has been strengthened by generations of immigrants
who became Americans through patience, hard work, and
assimilation. In this new century we must continue to welcome
legal immigrants and help them learn the customs and values that
unite all Americans, including liberty and civic responsibility,
equality under God, tolerance for others, and the English
language. In the coming months, I look forward to working with
Congress on comprehensive immigration reform that will enforce
our laws, secure our border, and uphold our deepest values.
Thank you for listening.
END
SOURCE:
White House