WASHINGTON
(By
Michael
Sheridan, NY
Daily News)
August 18,
2010
—
President
Obama and
ICE Director
John Morton
do not
Support
Amnesty
The head of
the nation's
Immigration
and Customs
Enforcement
says "no" to
amnesty,
despite a
union's
claim to the
contrary.
Director
John Morton
denies the
Obama
administration
favors
giving
amnesty to
illegal
immigrants,
and says his
agency is
doing all it
can to
deport those
who have
entered this
country
illegally.
"The
President
doesn't
support
amnesty, the
Secretary of
Homeland
Security
doesn't
support
amnesty, I
don't
support
amnesty,"
Morton told
Neil Cavuto
on FOX
Business
Network
Wednesday
night.
The dust-up
over amnesty
began with
an 11-page
memo that
leaked
recently,
suggesting
the
administration
would move
to authorize
a sweeping
legalization
of illegal
aliens.
The National
Immigration
and Customs
Enforcement
Council of
the American
Federation
of
Government
Employees,
which
represents
thousands of
ICE field
agents,
voted
unanimously
last week in
favor of a
"vote of no
confidence"
in Morton
and his
leadership
as a result
of the memo.
The union
feared the
ICE chief
had
"abandoned
the Agency's
core mission
of enforcing
United
States
Immigration
Law and
providing
for public
safety, and
have instead
directed
their
attention to
campaigning
for programs
and policies
related to
amnesty,"
union
president
Chris Crane
said in a
statement.
The Obama
administration
quickly
dismissed
the memo.
"The White
House
doesn't
support
amnesty,"
White House
Press
Secretary
Robert Gibbs
said more
than a week
ago, "and I
think people
that support
comprehensive
immigration
reform don't
support
amnesty
either."
On
Wednesday,
Morton
described
the undated
memo as a
"draft," and
said he was
"unaware" of
it before
reports
surfaced in
July.
"It wasn't
an ICE
memo," he
said. "I can
tell you
without
question,
there is no
plan afoot
to grant
deferred
action to
every single
illegal
alien in
this
country.
That is not
the position
of ICE."
The ICE
chief argued
that his
agency is
doing all it
can to
capture and
deport
illegal
immigrants
who commit
additional
crimes,
which it
considers a
priority
over those
who are
living here
peacefully.
"We have
resources
from
Congress to
remove about
400,000
people a
year,"
Morton said.
"We have
done more
with these
resources
than any
other
Administration
in the
history of
this
country."
Since the
beginning of
2010, ICE
has deported
some 279,035
illegal
immigrants,
according to
the agency.
"There is no
administration
in the
history of
this country
that has
removed more
people from
the United
States,"
Morton said.