The Hill
By Justin Sink
September 28, 2014
President
Obama will “make good” on his promise to implement executive actions to
address problems with the immigration system by the end of the year,
press secretary
Josh Earnest said Sunday.
The
president had initially pledged to take unilateral action on
immigration by the end of the summer, but the White House announced
earlier this month that he would hold
off until after the midterm elections.
White
House officials have said Obama was concerned that moving before the
midterm elections would make reform a partisan issue and polarize
support against it, although
the move was widely seen as a concession to Senate Democrats who were
locked in tough reelection battles and begged Obama to hold off.
The
delay has bred new concerns among immigration activists that the
president will not ever take the executive action, but Earnest insisted
that was not the case.
“This
is a promise the president will keep,” Earnest said during an
appearance on Telemundo’s “Enfoque con Jose Diaz-Balart.” “The president
has tasked his team with looking
at the law and determining what kind of executive authority he can use
to try to address the problems of our broken immigration system. They've
come up with some good solutions. They will be finalized before the end
of the year and the president will announce
them before the end of the year.”
Earnest
noted that “the president has taken action before that has made a
difference in try to addressing some of these problems,” pointing to his
deferred action program that allows some who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children to remain without the threat of deportation.
“The
president believed that they needed relief. And working with his
Homeland Security secretary and other law enforcement officials, was
able to bring them relief,”
Earnest said. “The president made good on that promise and the
president's gonna make good on this promise too.”
The
White House has seen a sharp drop in Latino support following his
decision to punt on immigration reform. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal
poll earlier this month showed
just 47 percent of Hispanic voters approve of the president's
performance, down 15 percentage points from April, 2013. Fewer than 3 in
10 Latino voters described themselves as "very positive" about Obama.
In
a Pew Research poll also released this month, a majority of Hispanic
Democrats - 52 percent - said their party wasn't doing a good job on
immigration issues.
The
president is expected to explain his decision to delay executive action
in greater detail on Thursday night, when he’s set to address the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus
Institute’s annual awards dinner.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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