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Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano told a Senate committee that the Obama administration has put more resources into the border, which is more secure than it has been in years, making now the best time for immigration reform. (Cronkite News Service photo by Connor Radnovich)

WASHINGTON -- Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano told a Senate committee Wednesday that the border is as secure as ever and it should not be an impediment to the comprehensive immigration reform.

Napolitano, noting recent reform proposals being pushed by both the White House and a bipartisan group of senators, told the Senate Judiciary Committee that "we are at a unique moment in history."

"All sides of the immigration debate agree that the status quo is not acceptable and that we must act to address the significant shortcomings of the current system," she said.

But the former goveneror of Arizona was challenged from both directions -- on one side by senators who charged that the administration has not fully enforced current immigration laws, and on the other by protesters upset that the law is being enforced too harshly.

Napolitano was less than a minute into her testimony when the first of what would be three waves of protests disrupted the hearing. The protesters appeared to be upset by deportations.

Each group of protesters was escorted from the hearing room by U.S. Capitol Police, who said they arrested a dozen people from the hearing.

Some Republican senators, meanwhile, said the administration is not focused enough on securing the border. They said that customs and immigrations officers get little support from the department in upholding current immigration laws.

Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., said calls for dealing with border security and "amnesty" simultaneously - as opposed to requiring a secure border first -- will result in amnesty without enforcement.

"For the American people … their concern is we're not going to have enforcement, but amnesty only," Sessions said.

If the administration had been more interested in enforcing current laws, he said, the American people might be more willing to accept a broad immigration reform.

But Napolitano noted that there are more U.S. Border Patrol agents now than ever before, that deportations of illegal immigrants hit a record high last year and that there are higher rates of drug and gun seizures. That is proof of a tighter border, she said.

"Too often, the ‘border security first' refrain has served as an excuse for failing to address overall immigration reform," Napolitano told the committee.

Napolitano, who primarily talked about President Barack Obama's immigration-reform proposal, focused on creating a pathway to citizenship, streamlining legal immigration and enforcing laws more efficiently.

The president's plan is similar to a framework announced two weeks ago by a bipartisan group of eight senators, including Arizona Republicans John McCain and Jeff Flake.

But the senators' plan would allow for a pathway to citizenship only after the "trigger" of border security is tripped. Flake asked Napolitano on Wednesday how to address the problem of defining a secure border.

But Napolitano disagreed with concept of a trigger for reform.

"A trigger implies you don't get to these other things … when in fact these all have to be looked at simultaneously," she said.

Flake said at the hearing that he wants to get immigration reform through Congress and to the president. But in a prepared statement released after the hearing, he said it is "crucial" to include border security in any such bill.

"Despite the administration's rhetoric, there is much more needed to secure the border, particularly in the Tucson sector," Flake's statement said. "Any definition of a strong immigration system must include border security, which is why making it a priority in the immigration bill being drafted is crucial."

The committee hearing on immigration reform came the day after the State of the Union address in which Obama challenged Congress to get a comprehensive immigration bill to his desk.

"Our immigration system is sorely out of date and it is time to fix it," Napolitano said.

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  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    what a dilemma for Democrat leaders
    They've sold their patriotic duty to people with no allegiance to the United States to simply have the votes to stay in power. They belittle the constitution, make a mockery of the current processes and race bait pinning people against each other. Low wages, a sense of slave labor, access to American services, just to pander for a petty vote.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    While neither party has taken immigration
    serious. The Obama Administration has single handedly created a mockery of the process and our laws.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    No more entitlements, no more free education
    no more automatic citizenship for babies born in the U.S. These are just some of the most important steps to curtail illegal immigration. Oh and simply enforcing the laws we have.
  • Abuse
    yrreta wrote...
    "Oh and simply enforcing the laws we have."
    That would be great, only it appears every time an attempt is made to enforce the laws, someone stands up and screams foul and claims they were caught not because of breaking the law, but because of racial profiling or discrimination, or some other weak excuse. Prime example is the commercial vehicle checkpoint this past week in Peoria. Supporting current laws for truck safety, undocumented driver gets arrested by ICE and now suddenly the check point becomes labeled as a racial profiling checkpoint.
  • Abuse
    yrreta wrote...
    Micho is right
    "The bigots seek laws they futilely hope will somehow stem this rising tide." Laws wont work, contraceptives maybe, but laws, no.
  • Abuse
    OneWonders wrote...
    Micho's
    "play by play of Republicans and Immigration" is so funny. Based off of nothing as usual or maybe scenarios dreamt in her mind that she wishes would actual play out. Ahh Micho's creativity is a wonderful thing!
    Equal Justice, Not Social Justice.
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    This is truly a "Unique Opportunity"
    To tell the politicians that are pushing this reform that we will not be fooled twice! Please take the time to review the 1986 amnesty, when the exact same promises were made...we do not need reform. We need enforcement.
  • Abuse
    2cents wrote...
    Yes, enforcement is the obvious, simple answer
    But the big assumption there is that security is truly the goal.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Republican leaders will continue to fake good
    on immigration so as not to immediately lose the support of the Fringe Right. The leaders, though, recognize that the law of diminishing returns is at work and that they will eventually have to fully abandon the dead weight.
  • Abuse
    SurpriseMe wrote...
    outdated system? duh
    upset over deportation? lol that is like a criminal being upset for serving jail time. We do need to change legal immigration process but that has nothing to do with deportation. check out azhottopics.wordpress.com for immigration solution it seems to have a win win solution.

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