Washington Times
By Stephen Dinan
April 18, 2014
A
day after reports that House Speaker John A. Boehner is telling
fundraisers he is determined to get an immigration bill done this year,
the Ohio Republican’s spokesman
walked those comments back slightly, saying any action will still
depend on President Obama.
“Nothing
has changed. As he’s said many times, the Speaker believes step-by-step
reform is important, but it won’t happen until the president builds
trust and demonstrates
a commitment to the rule of law,” said Brendan Buck, a Boehner
spokesman.
The
Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that Mr. Boehner told donors at a
closed-door fundraiser he is “hell-bent on getting this done this
year.” That stance is controversial
among many of his fellow Republicans, who think the issue is
politically treacherous, both now and for the GOP’s future.
House
Republicans have struggled with immigration since Mr. Obama’s 2012
re-election. Mr. Boehner, the day after that election, announced
immigration was the top issue
where he and the president could cooperate.
But Mr. Boehner’s troops have been less eager.
Early
this year Mr. Boehner released a series of principles for a broad
immigration overhaul, and it seemed like the issue was poised for a
resurgence. But those hopes
were dashed as Mr. Obama took unilateral steps to delay deadlines and
change interpretations of his health law — leaving many House
Republicans to say they feared he would do the same thing with an
immigration law.
Mr. Boehner has also adopted that stance, including in an interview with Fox News earlier this month.
“Every
time the president ignores the law, like the 38 times he has on
Obamacare, our members look up and go, ‘Wait a minute: You can’t have
immigration reform without
strong border security and internal enforcement. How can we trust the
president to actually obey the law and enforce the law that we would
write?’” the speaker said.
For
his part, Mr. Obama is facing fire from both sides: Conservatives who
say he’s not enforcing deportation laws, and immigrant-rights advocates
who say he’s being too
stern in who he’s deporting.
The
president is looking for ways to carve still more people out of danger
of deportation, but he’s also trying to find partners on Capitol Hill to
pass a broad legalization
of illegal immigrants, including granting most of them citizenship
rights.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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