The Hill
By Mike Lillis
November 12, 2014
Wary
that President Obama might back away from vows to ease deportations
unilaterally, House Democrats on Wednesday sought to hold the
president’s feet to the fire.
On
the first day of Congress’s return to Washington after the midterm
elections, the lawmakers pressed Obama to act swiftly and decisively to
reduce deportations, even in the face
of Republican warnings that sidestepping Congress could undermine
immigration reform legislation and sink the confirmation of Obama’s pick
for attorney general.
The Democrats aren’t mincing words.
“We’re
begging the president — there’s urgency to this — you said you were
going to do it. Go big!” Rep. Juan Vargas (D-Calif.) said Wednesday
during a press briefing
outside the Capitol.
Citing
Tuesday’s observance of Veterans Day, Vargas urged Obama to help
military families in particular — “families that have been divided
because you haven’t acted yet,” he charged.
“Allow these families to live in peace,” he said.
Rep.
Steny Hoyer (Md.), the Democratic whip, piled on, saying the move to
keep immigrant families together is “a moral and an economic”
imperative.
“Talk
is cheap. Action is what these families want,” Hoyer said. “What the
president needs to do is give immediate and significant relief to those
families that are being wrenched
apart and living in fear. I’m proud to join my colleagues in that
request.”
Since
March, Obama has vowed to seek ways to make his deportation policies
more “humane” for immigrant families, but he’s twice postponed any
action on the issue since then. The
first delay was designed to allow Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) the
political space to move immigration reform legislation over the summer;
the second was aimed at helping a handful of centrist Senate Democrats
survive reelection this month.
Neither achieved its goal.
Now,
with the elections passed and the Republicans showing little interest
in immigration legislation, the Democratic chorus for executive action
has grown only louder.
“We
know … we need comprehensive immigration reform,” Rep. José Serrano
(D-N.Y.) said Wednesday, “but in the meantime we have to protect
[families].”
Obama, for his part, says he has every intention of acting on the issue in the lame-duck.
“Before
the end of the year, we’re going to take whatever lawful actions that I
can take that I believe will improve the functioning of our immigration
system,” the president told
reporters the day after the elections. “What I’m not going to do is
just wait.”
But
the threat of executive action has drawn howls from GOP leaders, who
have long-accused Obama of abusing his authority in defiance of the
Constitution and congressional intent.
Sen.
Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who’s expected to be the Senate majority
leader in the next Congress, said Obama, by doubling down on his
executive action vows post-election, was
“waving a red flag in front of a bull.”
And
Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Mike Lee (R-Utah), both Tea Party
favorites who sit on the Judiciary Committee, are threatening to make
Obama’s moves on immigration a central
part of their vetting of the president’s attorney general nominee,
Loretta Lynch.
“The
nominee must demonstrate full and complete commitment to the law,” the
Republicans said in a joint statement over the weekend. “Loretta Lynch
deserves the opportunity to demonstrate
those qualities, beginning with a statement on whether or not she
believes the president’s executive amnesty plans are constitutional and
legal.”
Hispanic
Democrats and other immigrant rights advocates have long distrusted the
Republicans when it comes to immigration reform, arguing that GOP
leaders have no plan to take
up the thorny issue ahead of the 2016 presidential election regardless
of whether Obama acts alone or not.
“We’ve
reached a point now that waiting and waiting and waiting is not the
solution,” Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-Ariz.), head of the Congressional
Progressive Caucus, said Wednesday.
“The solution is for the president, who I support, to go big to protect
all families.”
Obama,
meanwhile, says there’s an easy antidote for Republicans infuriated by
his promise to rein in deportations without congressional approval.
“You send me a bill that I can sign,” he said last week, “and those executive actions go away.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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