Immigration policy isn't really what we at HHS do.


So now is an opportunity for us to stand up and have a good, strong immigration policy to make sure that E- Verify becomes mandatory and we have got to train and properly equip our Border Patrol.

As home secretary, I will work to ensure that our immigration policy is fair and humane.

It is clear that United States immigration policy is badly in need of reform.

At almost every step of modern immigration policy and immigration politics, we have exacerbated underlying problems and made things worse.

Immigration policy is a complicated issue. Or perhaps one should say immigration policies are complicated, since we have many different immigration laws and practices which interact in complex ways.

Our immigration policy should be driven by what is in the best interest of this great country and the American people. Comprehensive immigration reform will strengthen U.S. security and boost economic growth.

I've said for a long time that the governor and the mayors should be far more engaged in this conversation at the federal level. I mean, the consequences and the impact of the federal government's broken immigration policy do not land on the backs of the people in Washington. They just don't.

Our nation's immigration policy has been of top concern in recent years, and for good reason. With between eight and twelve million illegal aliens in the United States, it is obviously a problem out of control.

The American people are not anti-immigrant. We are concerned about the lack of coherence in our immigration policy and enforcement.