WASHINGTON — President Bush is committed to working with Congress on an overhaul of immigration laws, two Cabinet officials told a Senate panel Wednesday, but they hedged on the contentious issue of whether people who come to the U.S. illegally should have a path to citizenship.
The administration's priority is to secure the nation's borders and convince the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants to "come out of the shadows," Commerce Secretary Carlos M. Gutierrez told the Senate Judiciary Committee.
"I'm not sure that everyone wants to be a U.S. citizen. Many just want to be able to work, and if they can work legally, one day they would like to go back home," he said. "So I don't think that citizenship is what will make them come out of the shadows."
In the first hearing on immigration policy since the Democrats took over Congress, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff emphasized that any changes in the law should not amount to amnesty.
"We cannot give those who are here illegally because they've broken the law a leg up and an advantage over those who have played by the rules," he said.
Many Republicans, particularly in the House, broke with Bush last year over his support for what the White House has called "comprehensive immigration reform."
"I don't believe that House Republicans would support a bill that creates a path to citizenship for people who came to the country illegally," said Amos Snead, a spokesman for House Minority Whip Roy Blunt (R-Mo.).
In his testimony, Chertoff emphasized the need for tighter border security and tougher workplace enforcement measures. Praising a workplace crackdown last week in California and 16 other states, he said harsher penalties were needed to prevent workers from entering the country illegally.
But under questioning by committee Chairman Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), Chertoff and Gutierrez conceded that, for the most part, illegal workers were not taking jobs away from Americans. Asked about the likelihood of rounding up everyone here illegally, Chertoff acknowledged that "it would be a gargantuan task to try to locate, detain and deport 12 million people."
The hearing follows a renewed behind-the-scenes push by the White House to get a comprehensive overhaul passed before 2008 presidential and congressional campaigning swings into high gear. At least in broad terms, Bush agrees with congressional Democrats that the immigration laws -- last revised on a large scale in 1986 -- need significant retooling.