TIME
By Alex Altman
April 21, 2014
With
10 months passed since the Senate passed comprehensive immigration
reform, with the House unlikely to follow before midterm elections,
activists are calling on President
Obama to exercise executive authority on deportations
For
months now, the pattern has been the same. Immigration activists,
frustrated with inaction, latch onto some small glimmer of hope: a new
campaign to pressure the powerful,
or an approving remark by someone who can break the legislative
stalemate. Each time the prospect of progress fades as quickly as it
appeared.
In
the 10 months since the Senate passed a comprehensive reform of U.S.
immigration law, it has become abundantly clear that the GOP-controlled
House won’t follow suit
before November’s midterm elections. A report last week that House
Speaker John Boehner was “hellbent” on passing an immigration overhaul
in 2014 was swiftly shot down by his spokesman. “Nothing has changed,”
said the spokesman, Brendan Buck.
With
reform stalled in the House, immigration reformers have once again
ratcheted up pressure on President Barack Obama. They hope to convince
Obama to take executive
action to slow the tide of deportations.
A
memo released Monday by the AFL-CIO outlines the steps it believes the
Obama Administration can take to ease the impact of immigration
enforcement on immigrant families.
The memo comes as Jeh Johnson, Obama’s new secretary of the Department
of Homeland Security, conducts a review of the Administration’s
enforcement policies. The document calls for DHS to take four concrete
steps: granting work permits to certain undocumented
immigrants; reclaiming federal authority over enforcement policy from
the states; reforming the removal process; and protecting undocumented
workers who file workplace grievances.
Obama
has repeatedly resisted calls for him to use executive authority. He
says he lacks the discretion to make the changes activists have
sought—an argument that many
top Democrats reject. “The only way to truly fix it is through
congressional action. We have already tried to take as many
administrative steps as we could,” Obama said in a news conference last
week.
But
with House Republicans refusing to budge, proponents of reform on both
sides of the aisle have warned that Obama will act if Congress won’t.
Exercising executive authority
to ease deportations, the top concern of Hispanic groups, could help
mend fraying ties with Latino voters and nudge them toward the polls
before November elections that look grim for Democrats. Obama has made a
similar move in the past: In the summer of 2012,
with his reelection hanging in the balance, Obama signed an order that granted relief from deportations for certain young adults who had been brought to the U.S. illegally as children.
“I’m
convinced that if we don’t get it done by the August break, the
president, who is feeling a lot of pressure from having not done
anything on immigration reform, will
feel that he has to act through executive action,” Florida Republican
Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart told the Washington Post last week.
Obama
is staying coy about his intentions. “We’re going to review it one more
time,” Obama said last week of the DHS review, “to see if there’s more
that we can do to
make it more consistent with common sense and more consistent with I
think the attitudes of the American people, which is we shouldn’t be in
the business necessarily of tearing families apart who otherwise are
law-abiding.”
For
activists still searching for signs of hope, the answer seemed to
contain a warning to Republicans: Help fix the broken immigration
system, or the President will do
it without you.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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