New York Times (Editorial)
November 6, 2014
President
Obama said on Wednesday that he would act on his own by the end of the
year to “improve” the immigration system, presumably by giving many —
perhaps millions — of the country’s unauthorized
immigrants temporary protection from deportation and permission to
work. He has said this before, only to back off in deference to
election-year politics.
Now the election is over, and the only thing to say to the president is: Do it. Take executive action. Make it big.
He
must not give in to calls to wait. Six fruitless years is time enough
for anyone to realize that waiting for Congress to help fix immigration
is delusional. Senator Mitch McConnell and
Representative John Boehner have warned Mr. Obama that executive action
would destroy any chance of future legislation.
But
Republicans have had many, many opportunities to move on immigration,
and never have. They killed bipartisan reform in 2006 and 2007, and
again this year. The party, whose hard-core members
tried to stoke national panic at the border this summer, shrieking
about migrant children, Ebola and the Islamic State, is not ready to be
reasoned with.
The arguments for protecting a broad swath of immigrants through executive action, meanwhile, are firmly on Mr. Obama’s side.
IT
HONORS THE LAW Mr. Obama should direct the Department of Homeland
Security to focus its limited enforcement resources on removing violent
criminals, terrorists and other public-safety threats
— and not people who have deep roots in this country and pose no
threat. This use of discretion is customary and entirely legal.
IT
HELPS THE COUNTRY Having such a large immigrant population living here
outside the law also undermines the law. Ever more stringent crackdowns
waste resources by chasing down people who
pose no threat. Allowing unauthorized immigrants to live and work
without fear, and keeping families together, will boost the economy,
undercut labor exploitation and ease the strain on law enforcement. This
has been the goal of a comprehensive immigration
overhaul. A deportation reprieve would not be permanent, but it would
have many of the same benefits as legislative reform.
There
is reason to worry that Mr. Obama’s as-yet-unannounced plan for
executive action will be too cautious, small and narrow. He has not said
how big a group might qualify for protection.
He should start with those who would have qualified for legalization
under the bill that passed in the Senate in 2013 but died in the House.
That
bill, a serious attempt at a once-in-a-generation overhaul, would have
given millions with clean records a shot at legalization if they paid
fines and back taxes and went to the back
of the citizenship line, among other things. Mr. Obama strongly
endorsed the bill. His executive action should be just as broad.
There
will surely be intense debate when Mr. Obama draws the lines that
decide who might qualify for protection. Some simple questions should be
his guide: Do the people he could help have
strong bonds to the United States? Does deporting them serve the
national interest? If it doesn’t, they should have a chance to stay.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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