12/10/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/10/2024 17:24
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Today, U.S. Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Chair of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, and Border Safety, joined a hearing titled "How Mass Deportations Will Separate American Families, Harm Our Armed Forces, and Devastate Our Economy," to deliver remarks and question witnesses on the dangers of the incoming Trump Administration's mass deportation plans.
Padilla sharply criticized Donald Trump's extremist plans, which will separate spouses and rip parents away from their U.S. citizen children, while causing massive economic hardship. He referenced the threats posed by his anti-immigrant picks, Kristi Noem, Stephen Miller, and Tom Homan.
The mass deportations plan would lead to skyrocketing prices for food, goods, and services, and could drop the United States' GDP up to 6.8 percent. Undocumented immigrants make up nearly 14 percent of all construction workers and around 42 percent of our agricultural workforce. It would also take millions of dollars to find, detain, and remove Trump's targets for deportation, with millions more spent on hiring thousands of Border Patrol and ICE agents and building massive detention facilities for deportations.
Padilla questioned Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, Senior Fellow at the American Immigration Council, on the severe economic damage of deporting undocumented agricultural workers. Reichlin-Melnick said mass deportation would crumble our food supply, emphasizing the vital work immigrant farm workers do across agricultural sectors, including crop picking, meat and poultry processing, and dairy production. Padilla also stressed the importance of our immigrant construction workers, health care workers, students, and innovators to keep our country moving.
Additionally, Padilla called on his colleagues to pass his Citizenship for Essential Workers Act, which would create an expedited pathway to citizenship for the over 5 million immigrant workers deemed essential by the previous Trump Administration, who kept Americans healthy, fed, and safe during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Key Excerpts:
Video footage of Senator Padilla's full remarks is available here.
Senator Padilla is a leading voice in Congress for immigration reform. Last week, Padilla, Senator Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), and Senator Ben Ray Lujan (D-N.M.) called on President Biden to take urgent actions to protect long-term immigrant communities before the end of his term. Throughout the year, Padilla has called on the Biden Administration to protect long-term undocumented residents and ease certain DACA recipients' ability to be employed in the United States. Additionally, Padilla convened a Senate Budget Committee hearing alongside Chairman Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) titled "Unlocking America's Potential: How Immigration Fuels Economic Growth and Our Competitive Advantage."
Padilla continues to fight relentlessly to expand pathways to citizenship for millions of long-term U.S. residents. His bill, the Renewing Immigration Provisions of the Immigration Act of 1929, would update the existing Registry statute so that an immigrant may be eligible to apply for lawful permanent resident status if they meet certain conditions, providing a much-needed pathway to a green card for more than 8 million people, including Dreamers, TPS holders, children of long-term visa holders, essential workers, and highly skilled members of our workforce. He previously introduced the Citizenship for Essential Workers Act, which would create a pathway to citizenship for undocumented essential workers, including Dreamers, as his first bill in Congress.
More information about the hearing is available here.
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