Washington Post
By Ed O’Keefe
March 12, 2014
The
House passed a measure Wednesday that would expedite lawsuits brought
by Congress against a president who fails to fully enforce federal laws.
The
Republican-backed measure passed 233 to 181 and was the latest in a
string of Republican measures designed to calm their divided ranks by
raising doubts about President
Obama's leadership during a midterm election year. Five moderate
Democrats joined with every voting Republican to approve the bill.
If
passed, lawmakers concerned that a president isn't fully executing a
law would be able to file a lawsuit directly to a three-judge panel on a
federal district court
and appeal directly to the U.S. Supreme Court.
But
the White House said Wednesday that Obama would veto the legislation
and Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) called the measure
"dead on arrival" in the
Democratic-controlled Senate.
Before
the vote, GOP lawmakers blasted the Obama administration Wednesday for
failing to fully enforce several federal laws, including the Affordable
Care Act, current
immigration policy, sentencing laws and the federal ban on same-sex
marriage.
“The
Constitution gives Congress the responsibility to write the laws and
the Executive to enforce them," Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.), a lead
sponsor, said. "We don’t pass
suggestions. We don’t pass ideas. We pass laws."
Several
Democrats suggested that the "do-nothing Congress" was seeking to
punish Obama for being a "do-something president." Other Democrats
argued that the bill would
force Obama to reverse his decision to focus on deporting violent
criminals and repeat offenders instead of the children of undocumented
immigrants.
Immigration
activists reacted angrily and cited debate on the bill in the House
Judiciary Committee, where several Republicans criticized Obama for
deciding not to deport
those children, often referred to as "dreamers."
The
DREAM Coalition, a group representing the children of undocumented
immigrants, said the vote "demonstrates Republicans can no longer be
relied upon to bring up a sensible
and practicable immigration reform bill this year."
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