Senator
Cruz introduces bill to let states reject refugees
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[December 09, 2015]
By Alana Wise and Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senator Ted Cruz,
who is seeking the Republican nomination for president in 2016, said on
Tuesday that he introduced legislation to give governors the ability to
opt out of refugee resettlement programs.
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Cruz said that if President Barack Obama wanted to send refugees
to any state, his legislation would let its governor refuse to
participate, "to conclude that the federal government has not done a
sufficient job ensuring that the safety and security of the citizens
of the state will be protected."
The comments came at a news conference with Greg Abbott, the
Republican governor of Cruz's home state of Texas. Abbott was one of
the first U.S. governors to seek to block the resettlement of
refugees from Syria.
Many Americans have worried that those refugees might include
militants allied to the Islamic State. Such fears have intensified
since the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris and last week's killings in San
Bernardino, California.
"We are at a time of war," Cruz said.
The U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation after the Paris
attacks that would make it more difficult for refugees from war-torn
Syria and Iraq to enter the country. That measure has not yet come
up in the Senate, although some lawmakers want it included in a
massive spending bill Congress must pass in the next few days to
keep the government open.
Congress' Republican leaders have not yet disclosed their plans for
the legislation.
Obama, a Democrat, plans to admit 10,000 Syrian refugees in the next
year, a decision many Republicans have opposed since it was
announced in September. Three Senate Democrats held a news
conference on Tuesday with religious leaders who oppose including
the House refugee measure in the spending bill.
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"These refugees are not our enemies," Senator Tim Kaine said. "They
are fleeing our enemies."
Cruz said he had also authored legislation to impose a three-year
moratorium on refugees coming from countries where Islamic State or
al Qaeda controlled significant territory, and another measure that
would strip U.S. citizenship from any American who traveled abroad
to fight with militant groups.
Cruz also commended businessman Donald Trump, who is vying with him
for the Republican nomination for president, for "standing up and
focusing America's attention on the need to secure our borders."
Trump has proposed banning Muslims from entering the United States.
(Reporting by Alana Wise and Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Lisa Von
Ahn)
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