A new bill introduced this week by Congressman Al Green (D-TX) would restore and strengthen the DHS office responsible for investigating civil rights complaints and holding the department accountable, and it comes directly in response to what Green says was a deliberate effort to weaken it.
Green, a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, joined Ranking Member Bennie G. Thompson (D-MS) to introduce the Department of Homeland Security Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Authorization Act.
Both lawmakers say the Trump administration's cuts to the CRCL workforce gutted the office's ability to investigate complaints, oversee DHS policies, and provide meaningful accountability within the department.
Therefore, the bill would directly address those vulnerabilities by expanding the office's authority, requiring civil rights officers to be placed across all DHS operational components, improving the public complaint process, and mandating annual reports to Congress.
Green framed the legislation as a matter of fundamental principle. "Homeland security and civil liberties are not competing priorities; they are complementary responsibilities," he said. "We must protect our homeland without compromising the constitutional rights and freedoms that define us as a Nation."
He added that the bill is designed to ensure the office has "the authority, transparency, and independence necessary to hold the Department accountable" and to rebuild public confidence that security and liberty can advance together.
Thompson was equally direct, arguing that even before recent cuts, the office lacked the tools it needed. "It is critical for DHS to have a fully staffed, properly resourced, and transparent Civil Rights and Civil Liberties office," he said, adding that the legislation would make certain what happened to the office "is not allowed to happen again."
Additionally, the legislation follows the Trump administration's significant reduction of the CRCL workforce, which critics say left the office without enough staff or authority to carry out its core mission.
Even before those cuts, Thompson argued, the office lacked the necessary powers to do its job properly.
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