Rubio: “We can’t” take Syrian refugees, impossible to do real screenings

It’s disquieting, but unfortunately not all that shocking, that the Democratic candidates revealed during Saturday’s debate that they’re still in support of accepting Syrian refugees. After all, Bernie Sanders unabashedly answered that he still sees climate change as the greatest threat to national security.

The Republican candidates have taken a starkly different approach. A particularly notable response comes from Marco Rubio, who spoke with George Stephanopoulos on ABC’s This Week.

Rubio was sharing his general thoughts on what to do after the terrorist attack in Paris, but his point about refugees is particularly worth highlighting.

He was asked to respond to statements from Sen. Rand Paul that Rubio blocked a national security amendment involving more scrutiny for refugees and immigrants. Rubio insisted he did not, and pointed to how Paul has wanted to get rid of metadata efforts to track terrorists if a similar attack had occurred in the United States:

The background checks are required now. The problem is not the background checks. The problem is we can’t background check them. You can’t pick up the phone and call Syria. And that’s one of the reasons why I said we won’t be able to take more refugees. It’s not that we don’t want to, it’s that we can’t. Because there’s no way to background check someone that’s coming from Syria. Who do you call and do a background check on them?

He also made the point that even if there is only one out of 1,000 refugees who may be ISIS, that’s still a problem:

The bottom line is that this is not just a threat coming from abroad. What we need to open up to and realize is that we have a threat here at home — home-grown violent extremists. Individuals who perhaps have not even traveled abroad, who had been radicalized online. This has become a multi-faceted threat. In the case of what’s happening in Europe, this is a swarm of refugees, and as I’ve said repeatedly over the last few months, you can have 1,000 people come in, and 999 of them are just poor people fleeing oppression and violence, but one of them is an ISIS fighter. If that’s the case, you have a problem, and there is no way to vet that out. There is no background check system in the world that allows us to find that out, because who do you call in Syria to background check them?

During Saturday’s debate, Hillary had emphasized a screening process. Rubio’s answer may have been in response to her as well as to Paul then.

As a final question, Rubio was asked “how have these attacks changed the race for the White House.” Rubio instead answered that it is the federal government’s “number one obligation… to provide for our security.” He had begun his answer by saying “I don’t think this is time to be doing political analysis on all of this.”

Rubio’s efforts to not politicize the attacks did not go noticed by ThinkProgress, however, who wrote Monday morning “Rubio Already Using Paris Attacks for Fundraising.” ThinkProgress points to how viewers are prompted to donate. As of Monday afternoon though, the link provided directs to the video in the “News” section it is filed under, without such an opportunity to donate.

Eventually, in the last paragraph of the piece, they criticized Rubio more on substance, in an attempt to rebut his point about background checks.

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