New York Times
By Michael Shear
November 17, 2014
WASHINGTON
— President Obama is poised to ignore stark warnings that executive
action on immigration would amount to “violating our laws” and would be
“very difficult to defend legally.”
Those warnings came not from Republican lawmakers but from Mr. Obama himself.
For
years, the president has repeatedly waved aside the demands of Latino
activists and Democratic allies who begged him to take action on his
own, and he insisted publicly that a decision
to shield millions of immigrants from deportation without an act of
Congress would amount to nothing less than the dictates of a king, not a
president.
In
a Telemundo interview in September 2013, Mr. Obama said he was proud of
having protected the “Dreamers” — people who came to the United States
illegally as young children — from deportation.
But he said at the time that he could not apply that same action to
other groups of people.
“If
we start broadening that, then essentially, I’ll be ignoring the law in
a way that I think would be very difficult to defend legally,” Mr.
Obama told Jose Diaz-Balart in the interview.
“So that’s not an option.”
President
Obama’s executive action plans may allow up to five million
unauthorized immigrants to stay in the United States and obtain work
permits.
But
Mr. Obama has effectively reversed his position and now said he
believes that such actions can be “legally unassailable,” as a senior
White House official put it last week. Mr. Obama is
expected to announce plans soon to expand the program for Dreamers to
shield up to five million people from deportation and provide work
permits for many of them.
The
president insisted over the weekend that he had not changed his
position. During a news conference in Australia, the president said that
his earlier answers about the limits of his executive
authority were prompted by people who asked him whether he could enact,
by fiat, a bipartisan immigration bill that had passed the Senate,
which would have provided a path to legalization for more of the 11
million unauthorized people in the United States.
“Getting
a comprehensive deal of the sort that is in the Senate legislation, for
example, does extend beyond my legal authorities,” Mr. Obama said
Sunday. “There are certain things I cannot
do.”
In
fact, most of the questions that were posed to the president over the
past several years were about the very thing that he is expected to
announce within a matter of days: whether he could
do something to reduce deportations and keep families together if
Congress would not act.
The
president was pressed on that very issue during a Google Hangout in
February 2013. An activist asked whether he could do more to keep
families from being “broken apart” while Congress
remained gridlocked on immigration legislation.
“This
is something that I have struggled with throughout my presidency,” Mr.
Obama said. “The problem is, is that I’m the president of the United
States, I’m not the emperor of the United
States. My job is to execute laws that are passed.”
Officials
have said the president could announce a series of executive actions as
early as this week. The move comes after a concerted lobbying campaign
by immigration advocates demanding
presidential action in the face of 400,000 deportations every year. And
it reflects the president’s mounting frustration that Republicans have
blocked all efforts to pass immigration legislation.
At
the news conference in Australia over the weekend, Mr. Obama implored
Congress to pass a bill that would secure the border, revamp the legal
immigration system and legalize many of the
11 million unauthorized immigrants living in the United States.
“Give
me a bill that addresses those issues,” Mr. Obama said at the
conclusion of the G-20 summit in Brisbane, Australia. “I’ll be the first
one to sign it and, metaphorically, I’ll crumple
up whatever executive actions that we take and we’ll toss them in the
wastebasket.”
When that did not happen by the summer, officials said, Mr. Obama decided he should act on his own.
That
decision puts the president in a drastically different posture than the
one he took in numerous interviews and speeches since 2010. In those
settings, Mr. Obama was repeatedly urged to
act on his own to reduce the number of families that were being
separated by deportations. In each of the appearances, he rejected the
idea and urged people to pressure Republicans in Congress to pass a
bill.
In
an immigration speech in San Francisco last November, several
protesters repeatedly interrupted the president, yelling “Stop
deportations! Stop deportations!” Mr. Obama told the protesters
that he respected their “passion,” but insisted that only Congress had
the authority to do what they wanted.
“The
easy way out is to try to yell and pretend like I can do something by
violating our laws,” he said. “And what I’m proposing is the harder
path.”
And
at a Town Hall in March of 2011, months before taking action to keep
the dreamers from being deported, Mr. Obama said the nation’s laws would
not allow him to do that.
“There
are enough laws on the books by Congress that are very clear in terms
of how we have to enforce our immigration system that for me to simply,
through executive order, ignore those congressional
mandates would not conform with my appropriate role as president,” he
said.
Republicans
have seized on Mr. Obama’s past statements as evidence of what they
call a shaky legal foundation for the president’s expected actions. In
an email to reporters, the Republican
National Committee on Monday asked, “When did we add a “politically
convenient clause” to the Constitution in the last four years?”
During
the news conference, Mr. Obama said that in recent months, he had
received legal advice from Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. about the
limits of what he can do to reshape the immigration
system. The president declined to describe that advice, but said that
he would reveal it when he made an announcement.
What
seems clear is that the legal advice will support Mr. Obama’s current
views about his executive powers, not his previous views.
“I
can’t wait in perpetuity when I have authorities that, at least for the
next two years, can improve the system, can allow us to shift more
resources to the border rather than separating
families; improve the legal immigration system,” Mr. Obama said in
Australia. “I would be derelict in my duties if I did not try to improve
the system that everybody acknowledges is broken.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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