As we begin to debate the issue of immigration, @SenSchumer is blocking a vote on my amdt to address problem of dangerous #SanctuaryCities, putting interests of criminals before public safety.
For there to be a good-faith bill on #DACA, dangerous #SanctuaryCity policies must be addressed: DREAM Act says if you commit certain crimes, you lose protections & can be deported. If local law enf. can’t cooperate with DHS/ICE, then this provision is virtually unenforceable.
I once again ask my colleagues to focus their attention on the serious problem of dangerous #SanctuaryCities. There's lots of misinformation about #SanctuaryCities so here are the facts.
#SanctuaryCities are jurisdictions/municipalities, like Philly, that have policies barring local law enf. from cooperating with fed. immigration authorities in certain instances, even in cases when they wanted to help. These policies hamper law enf. & make us less safe.
For example: Philly PD once arrested an illegal immigrant, who’d previously been deported, for assault & other charges. Fed. immigration officials asked Philly PD to hold him temporarily. Instead, the man was set free. He was later arrested for raping a child under the age of 13.
Philly's extreme + dangerous #SanctuaryCity law prohibited the police from even talking with federal immigration authorities. This wouldn't have happened if Philly wasn't a #SanctuaryCity.
#SanctuaryCity policies aren’t just unique to Philly. Many of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties have #SanctuaryCity policies. These laws are as misguided as they are dangerous.
This isn’t about asking local police to enforce fed. immigration law. Fed. immigration officials are merely asking police to hold a person – who’s already been arrested and is in the US illegally – until DHS/ICE can arrive to question or take custody.
Immigrants want safe streets, too, and the bill has language to protect those here illegally who come forward as a victim or witness of a crime.
Other than in enforcing immigration law, there is no other type of crime where a politician-made mandate ties local police hands when an officer thinks – in the interest of public safety – cooperation w/fed. law enforcement is necessary.
Leaders from both sides of the aisle agree: we must end the indefensible policy of protecting dangerous criminals from deportation. #SanctuaryCities do not protect the innocent, they simply make it harder to get violent criminals off the streets.
Enough playing politics with the safety and well-being of the American people. I ask my colleagues to join me in saying no more to #SanctuaryCities. Let’s make these dangerous policies a thing of the past.
Apparently some of our Democratic colleagues care more about their $400 B future spending spree on matters completely unrelated to veterans—facilitated by what they snuck into the veterans burn pit legislation—than the programs and funding for veterans exposed to toxic chemicals.
The PACT Act could have passed weeks ago if Democrats had dropped the spending boondoggle that is completely unrelated to veterans.
Since they can’t bring themselves to abandon yet another needless, inflationary spending spree, here’s an idea: let the Senate vote on it.
This short-sighted action—taken without a Senate-confirmed chairman or legislation—could have a chilling effect on any bank considering offering crypto services.
Rather than reflexively pumping the brakes on banks using new technologies like crypto and stablecoins, regulators should provide clear pathways for innovation with Congressional authorization.
The FDIC’s directive underscores the need for Congress to provide regulatory clarity.
While I appreciate that my colleagues and the White House have acknowledged their original crypto tax had flaws, the Warner-Portman amendment picks winners and losers based on the type of technology employed. That’s horrible for innovation.
The Warner-Portman plan exempts bitcoin miners, but not other transaction validators or software developers who create these platforms.
What does that mean? Two identical services could receive dramatically different regulatory treatment depending on the technology used.
.@USTreasury wants maximum flexibility to regulate and tax crypto as they see fit. Congress should not allow that to happen.
We need to have this debate in public and in full, especially before potentially disruptive changes are made that push crypto overseas.
Yesterday in the @SenateBudget Committee, Dems held a hearing titled "The Income and Wealth Inequality Crisis in America."
By using incomplete/misleading data, Dems sought to paint the picture of a dire crisis.
The complete data tells a different story.
A thread 🔽
Let's start with a chart showing wage/salary data provided by Robert Reich, who was invited by Dems to testify on the matter. His chart sure looks like it's declining. But, he chose not to provide all the available data. He stopped at '18 despite data for '19+'20 being available.
Let's take a look at the complete data set:
It's the same graph, except it includes a very significant uptick right where Mr. Reich chose to stop providing data. Further, it shows a nearly decade-long upward trend accelerating right in those year.
My staff has begun scrubbing the Democrat “COVID-19 relief” bill.
What did we find?
Tens of billions of dollars in “gifts” from the American taxpayer.
THREAD ↓
When Americans buy clothes, groceries, or any goods, they typically don’t like to pay more than 100% of the listed price.
But not their government.
Here’s where the government says it’s willing to give an amount – from this bill and others enacted over the last 12 months – that’s not just equal to 100% of a transit agency’s operating costs, but instead 132%!