H.R. 5717, Dealing with Federal Funding for States and Localities

September 20, 2024 | H.R. 5717

Immigration enforcement is important, but singlemindedly prioritizing it over public safety and other law enforcement, as this bill does, is a terrible mistake. Despite being promoted as a vehicle to reduce crime, this bill would have quite the opposite effect. 

Put simply, when working people fear immigration consequences for engaging with local authorities, they are less likely to report crimes. In just one alarming illustration of the far-reaching consequences of this approach, a recent study of counties that actively cooperate with federal immigration enforcement documented a nearly 50% drop in reporting of workplace health and safety violations in key industries, and a corresponding increase in workplace injuries by roughly 24%. Clearly, when we allow conditions in which workers are afraid to file claims, we endanger workers physically and deepen the risk of other such workplace crimes as wage theft, discrimination and sexual harassment, which already are far too common.

Legislative Alert

This is Bad for working people.

Vote result: Passed

YEAs: 219
NAYs: 186

Legislator Sort descending State District Party Vote
Rep. Ed Case
HI
1 Democrat Yes
Rep. Sean Casten
IL
6 Democrat No
Rep. Kathy Castor
FL
14 Democrat No
Rep. Joaquín Castro
TX
20 Democrat No
Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer
OR
5 Republican Yes
Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick
FL
20 Democrat No
Rep. Judy Chu
CA
28 Democrat No
Rep. Juan Ciscomani
AZ
6 Republican Yes
Rep. Katherine Clark
MA
5 Democrat No
Rep. Yvette D. Clarke
NY
9 Democrat No
Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II
MO
5 Democrat Not Voting
Rep. Ben Cline
VA
6 Republican Yes
Rep. Michael Cloud
TX
27 Republican Yes
Rep. James E. Clyburn
SC
6 Democrat No
Rep. Andrew Clyde
GA
9 Republican Yes
Rep. Steve Cohen
TN
9 Democrat No
Rep. Tom Cole
OK
4 Republican Yes
Rep. Mike Collins
GA
10 Republican Yes
Rep. James Comer
KY
1 Republican Yes
Rep. Gerald E. Connolly
VA
11 Democrat No