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President

President's Radio Address to the Nation.

05 August 2006

President's Radio Address to the Nation, August 5, 2006

(Bush says border security, immigration reform are mutually reinforcing)

Enhanced border security depends on the passage of comprehensive immigration reform in the United States, says President Bush.

In his August 5 radio address to the nation, Bush described his recent visit to the Rio Grande Border Patrol Sector in Texas, where he observed the Border Patrol in action.  The president noted that Border Patrol agents, supported by National Guard units, are closely monitoring border crossings into the United States, seizing contraband, and detaining illegal immigrants.

Yet despite the assistance of 21st-century technology, the Border Patrol cannot be expected to stem the tide of illegal immigration into the country unless Congress enacts comprehensive immigration reform, said Bush.  A guest worker program would be a vital part of that reform, creating “a legal and orderly path for foreign workers to enter our country to work on a temporary basis,” he explained.

The president mentioned the need to resolve the status of illegal immigrants that are already living in the United States. “They should not be given an automatic path to citizenship.  This is amnesty, and I oppose it,” he said. Instead, he urged the adoption of “a rational middle ground between automatic citizenship for illegal immigrants and mass deportations of people who’ve been living here for many years with jobs, families, and deep roots in our country.”

The president called for comprehensive immigration reform “that honors the American tradition of the melting pot by helping newcomers assimilate” and is both “rational and compassionate.” Such reform “will uphold our laws [and] meet the needs of our economy,” he concluded.

Following is a transcript of the president’s August 5 radio address:

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
(Crawford, Texas)
Saturday, August 5, 2006

RADIO ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENTTO THE NATION

THE PRESIDENT:  Good morning.  This week, my Administration met a key objective in our efforts to better secure our nation's border.

In May, I pledged to deploy up to 6,000 National Guard members to support the Border Patrol, and we fulfilled that pledge by August 1st.  Through Operation Jump Start, National Guard members are now on duty supporting the Border Patrol in Texas, California, Arizona, and New Mexico.

On Thursday, I visited the Rio Grande Valley Border Patrol Sector in Texas.  I saw firsthand how the National Guard is working with our Border Patrol agents to improve border security.  National Guard troops are helping with surveillance, construction, and logistics.  They're building and repairing fences, maintaining vehicles, and manning detection equipment on the border and in command centers.

The arrival of National Guard units has allowed the Border Patrol to move more agents into front-line positions, and this additional manpower is delivering results.  With the support of the National Guard, Border Patrol agents have seized over 17,000 pounds of illegal drugs and caught more than 2,500 illegal immigrants since June 15th.  Just last month, Border Patrol agents in the Rio Grande Valley Sector confiscated more than 4,200 pounds of marijuana hidden in a tractor-trailer.  And the support of the National Guard was important in making this seizure happen.

Rational and comprehensive immigration reform must begin with border security, and we have more to do.  So I've asked Congress to fund dramatic increases in manpower and technology for the Border Patrol.  We will add 6,000 new Border Patrol agents.  We will build high-tech fences in urban corridors and new patrol roads and barriers in rural areas.  And we will employ motion sensors, infrared cameras, and unmanned aerial vehicles to prevent illegal crossings.  By deploying 21st century technologies, we will make our Border Patrol agents even more effective and our border more secure.

Yet to be successful, comprehensive immigration reform must also accomplish four other critical goals.  We need a temporary worker program that will create a legal and orderly path for foreign workers to enter our country to work on a temporary basis.  This program will add to our security by helping us know who is in our country and why they are here.  And by reducing pressure on our border, it will free up our Border Patrol to focus on making sure we stop terrorists, violent criminals, and drug smugglers from entering our country.

We need to enforce our immigration laws at our Nation's work sites.  To enforce the law, we have launched raids on businesses that knowingly hire illegal immigrants.  We are filing criminal charges against these employers, and we are prosecuting them to the fullest extent of the law.

To help honest businesses follow the law, I propose more effective tools to verify the legal status of workers.  These tools should include a tamper-proof identification card for legal foreign workers.  By taking these steps, we will make it easier for businesses to obey the law and leave them no excuse for violating it.

We need to resolve the status of illegal immigrants who are already here.  They should not be given an automatic path to citizenship.  This is amnesty, and I oppose it.  Amnesty would be unfair to those who are here lawfully, and it would invite further waves of illegal immigration.  We will find a rational middle ground between automatic citizenship for illegal immigrants and mass deportations of people who've been living here for many years with jobs, families, and deep roots in our country.

Finally, we need comprehensive immigration reform that honors the American tradition of the melting pot by helping newcomers assimilate.  Americans are bound together by our shared ideals, our history, and the ability to speak and write the English language.  When immigrants assimilate, they advance in our society, realize their dreams, and add to the unity of America.  We can fix the problem of illegal immigration and deliver an immigration system that is rational and compassionate.

By passing comprehensive immigration reform, we will uphold our laws, meet the needs of our economy, and keep America what she has always been -- an open door to the future, a blessed and promised land, one Nation under God.

Thank you for listening.

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