TIME
By Alex Altman
July 24, 2014
When
President Obama issues executive orders on immigration in coming weeks,
pro-reform activists are expecting something dramatic: temporary relief
from deportation and
work authorization for perhaps several million undocumented immigrants.
If the activists are right, the sweeping move would upend a contentious
policy fight and carry broad political consequences.
The
activists met privately with the President and his aides June 30 at the
White House, and say in that meeting Obama suggested he will act before
the November midterm
elections. They hope his decision will offer relief to a significant
percentage of the estimated 11.7 million undocumented immigrants in the
U.S. “He seems resolute that he’s going to go big and go soon,” says
Frank Sharry, executive director of the pro-reform
group America’s Voice.
Exactly
what Obama plans to do is a closely held secret. But following the
meeting with the activists, Obama declared his intention to use his
executive authority to reform
parts of a broken immigration system that has cleaved families and
hobbled the economy. After being informed by Speaker John Boehner that
the Republican-controlled House would not vote on a comprehensive
overhaul of U.S. immigration law this year, the President
announced in a fiery speech that he was preparing “to do what Congress
refuses to do, and fix as much of our immigration system as we can.”
Obama
has been cautious about preempting Congress. But its failure to act has
changed his thinking. The recent meeting “was really the first time we
had heard from the
administration that they are looking at” expanding a program to provide
temporary relief from deportations and work authorization for
undocumented immigrants, says Marielena Hincapié, executive director of
the National Immigration Law Center.
The
White House won’t comment on how many undocumented immigrants could be
affected. “I don’t want to put a number on it,” says a senior White
House official, who says
Obama’s timeline to act before the mid-term elections remains in place.
Obama
has a broad menu of options at his disposal, but there are two major
sets of changes he can order. The first is to provide affirmative relief
from deportation to
one or more groups of people. Under this mechanism, individuals
identified as “low-priority” threats can come forward to seek temporary
protection from deportation and work authorization. In 2012, the administration created a program, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), that allowed eligible young unauthorized immigrants to apply for a two-year reprieve from deportation and a work permit.
The
most aggressive option in this category would be expanding deferred action to anyone who could have gained legal status under the bipartisan
bill that passed the Senate
in June 2013. According to a Congressional Budget Office analysis, the
Senate bill would have covered up to 8 million undocumented immigrants.
It is unlikely that Obama goes that far. But even more modest steps
could provide relief to a population numbering
in the seven figures. “You can get to big numbers very quickly,” says
Marshall Fitz, director of immigration policy at the Center for American
Progress, a progressive think tank.
One
plausible option would be to expand DACA to include some family members
of those already eligible. Says a Congressional aide: “While there are
several options to provide
temporary deportation relief, we expect an expansion of the DACA
program to other groups of individuals to be the most clear
opportunity.”
It’s
hard to pin down how many people this would cover; it would depend on
how the administration crafts the order. But the numbers are
substantial. According to the CBO,
there are an estimated 4.7 million undocumented parents with a minor
child living in the U.S., and 3.8 million whose children are citizens.
Around 1.5 million undocumented immigrants are married to a U.S. citizen
or lawful resident, but have been unable to
gain legal status themselves.
Obama
could also decide to grant protections for specific employment
categories, such as the 1 million or so undocumented immigrants working
in the agricultural sector,
or to ease the visa restrictions hindering the recruitment of
high-skilled foreign workers to Silicon Valley. Either move would please
centrist and conservative business lobbies, who have joined with the
left to press for comprehensive reform, and might help
temper the blowback.
The
second bucket of changes Obama is considering are more modest
enforcement reforms. Jeh Johnson, Obama’s Secretary of Homeland
Security, is deep into a review of the
administration’s enforcement practices, and it is likely Obama will
order some changes to immigration enforcement priorities. But if these
tweaks are the extent of the changes, it would be a blow to activists
expecting more. “That’s crumbs off the table compared
to the meal we’d be expecting,” says Sharry.
Until
now, Obama has frustrated immigration-reform activists by insisting he
has little latitude to fix a broken system on his own. To a large
extent, he’s right. Any
relief the President provides would be fleeting; it’s up to Congress to
find a permanent solution by rewriting the law. Deferring deportations
does not confer a green card. It only offers a temporary fix.
But
legal experts say Obama does have the authority to take the kinds of
executive action he is thought to be considering. “As a purely legal
matter, the President does
have wide discretion when it comes to immigration,” says Stephen
Yale-Loehr, an immigration scholar at Cornell University Law School.
“Just as DACA was within the purview of the president’s executive
authority on immigration, so too would expanding DACA fall
within the president’s inherent immigration authority.” According to a
recent report by the Center for American Progress, categorical grants of
affirmative relief to non-citizens have been made 21 times since 1976,
by six different presidents.
Even
if Obama is on firm footing from a legal standpoint, he would be wading
into political quicksand. Republicans would assail him for extending
mass “amnesty” to undocumented
immigrants at a moment when the southern border faces an unresolved
child-migration crisis. Immigration would become a signal topic in the
fall elections, and given that Obama’s handling of the issue has slipped
to just 31%, that wouldn’t necessarily favor
the President’s party. It would likely damage vulnerable Democratic
incumbents in red states, including several whose re-election could
determine control of the Senate. And Congress’s incipient failure to
reach an agreement on an emergency supplemental bill
to address the border crisis muddies the waters even further.
At
the same time, Obama will be pilloried by Republicans no matter what he
does. Despite the short-term political consequences, in the long run a
bold stroke could help
cement the Democratic Party’s ties with the vital and fast-growing
Hispanic voting bloc. And it would be a legacy for Obama, a cautious
chief executive whose presidency has largely been shaped by events
outside his control. In the case of immigration, he has
the capacity to ease the pain felt by millions with the stroke of a
pen.
“There
are two ways this could go,” says Fitz of the Center for American
Progress. Obama will be remembered as either “the deporter-in-chief, or
the great emancipator.
Those are the two potential legacies.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment