Washington Times
By Stephen Dinan
September 6, 2014
Immigrant-rights
groups reacted furiously Saturday after the White House made clear
President Obama will not take unilateral action on immigration before
November’s elections,
nodding at the political realities of the issue as he punted on the key
policy questions.
With
a number of key Senate races in GOP-leaning states, Democrats had
feared that action now would anger voters and cost them control of the
upper chamber, and had privately
begged the White House to hold off on any move to halt deportations.
But
immigration activists said it’s the latest in a series of moves by Mr.
Obama to shove their interests aside for the sake of politics.
“We
advocates didn’t make the reform promise; we just made the mistake of
believing it,” said Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice,
who had been among the
most vocal in demanding the president take action. “When the going gets
tough, they abandon Latinos and their issues as fast as you can say piñata.”
Earlier this week White House press secretary Josh Earnest had denied that politics were playing a role in Mr. Obama’s thinking,
“That’s
not what the president is focused on. What the president is focused on
is trying to solve problems,” he assured reporters.
Mr.
Obama’s decision to put off action suggests the White House still
believes it can win enough seats in November’s elections to preserve a
majority in the Senate. Republicans
would need to net six seats to win control.
Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who opposed the president taking
unilateral action, still called Mr. Obama’s decision “cynical.”
“The
president isn’t saying he’ll follow the law — he’s just saying he’ll go
around the law once it’s too late for Americans to hold his party
accountable in the November
elections. This is clearly not decision-making designed around the best
policy — it’s Washington politics at its worst,” the Kentucky
Republican said.
Mr.
Obama’s hand was forced in part by the surge of illegal immigrant
children and families that poured across the border in the late spring
and summer, lured by smugglers
who said lax immigrant policies in the U.S. would give them a chance to
gain a foothold here.
The
administration admitted that was true, and vowed to stiffen
enforcement, though its options were limited and it has done little
other than to juggle staffing.
Still,
the surge changed the politics of the issue, with voters telling
pollsters that they viewed border security as more important than
legalizing illegal immigrants.
That was a reversal from last year, when polls showed legalization took
precedence over border security.
For
illegal immigrants, while the news of a delay is disheartening, it’s
hardly a sign of tougher times. Indeed, a Washington Times analysis
earlier this year estimated
that the chances of an illegal immigrant being deported who isn’t a
recent border-crosser and doesn’t have a criminal record is less than 1
percent a year.
But
immigrant-rights advocates have long questioned Mr. Obama’s commitment
to them, and this latest move will only deepen those concerns, which
stretch back to his days
in the Illinois Senate and then as a U.S. senator, when he voted to
build the border fence.
When
he ran for president in 2008 he promised Hispanic audience he would
work to pass an immigration bill in his first year in the White House,
but instead worked on health
care, the economic stimulus, global warming and other priorities.
The
one major exception came in 2012, just months before he was seeking
re-election, when he announced he would grant tentative legal status to illegal immigrant young adults who had come to the U.S. as children, who had completed a high school education and had kept a clean criminal record.
That
move, which more than a half-million illegal immigrants have taken
advantage of, earned him applause from Hispanics, and helped propel him
to an overwhelming percentage
of the Hispanic vote in the 2012 election.
Some
legal analysts had questioned whether Mr. Obama had the legal authority
to halt deportations, and a federal judge in Texas had even concluded
it was illegal — though
the also judge ruled he didn’t have jurisdiction over the case.
Activists
had been calling on Mr. Obama to expand that tentative legal status
policy to include illegal immigrant parents of U.S. citizen children,
and of the young adults who gained status under the 2012 policy.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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