Reuters
By Doina Chiacu, Howard Schneider and Valerie Volcovici
November 9, 2014
Obama defends plan to act on immigration: CBS interview
(Reuters) - U.S.
President Barack Obama defended his plan to use executive powers to
implement some immigration reforms, saying in an interview broadcast on
Sunday he had waited long enough for Congress to act.
Obama told
congressional leaders on Friday he would try to ease some restrictions
on undocumented immigrants, despite warnings from Republican leaders
that such actions would "poison the well" or would be "a
red flag in front of a bull".
The meeting came after
Obama's Democratic Party was punished in midterm elections on Tuesday.
Republicans seized the U.S. Senate and kept a majority in the House of
Representatives, in what Obama said was a
message from voters who held him responsible for how Washington worked,
or didn't.
In an interview on
CBS' "Face the Nation," Obama said he had watched while the U.S. Senate
produced a bipartisan immigration reform bill, only to have it not taken
up by House Republican Speaker John Boehner.
Obama said he had told
Boehner if he could not get it done by year's end, the White House was
going to have to take steps to improve the system.
"Everybody agrees the
immigration system's broken. And we've been talking about it for years
now in terms of fixing it," Obama said in the interview, according to a
CBS transcript.
U.S. borders needed to
be secure, the legal immigration system needed to be more efficient and
there needed to be a path to legal status for the 11 million
undocumented immigrants.
"We don't have the capacity to deport 11 million people -- everybody agrees on that," he said.
Obama insisted he was not telling Republicans they had run out of time or trying to circumvent them.
"The minute they pass a
bill that addresses the problems with immigration reform, I will sign
it and it supersedes whatever actions I take," Obama said in the
interview.
"And I'm encouraging them to do so ... on parallel track we're going to be implementing an executive action.
"But if in fact a bill
gets passed, nobody's going to be happier than me to sign it, because
that means it will be permanent rather than temporary."
Without any changes,
the government will continue to misallocate resources, deport people who
should not be deported and not deport those who are dangerous, he said.
Any unilateral action
promises to draw the ire of Republicans in Congress. U.S. Senator John
Barrasso, the No. 4 Republican in the Senate, told Reuters on Friday
members of Congress had told Obama that would
be a "toxic decision".
"It will hurt cooperation on every issue," Barrasso told "Fox News Sunday".
"What the president does over the next two months is going to set the tone for the next two years."
Representative Darrell
Issa, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee,
said on ABC's "This Week" he hoped Obama would delay action "and have a
real comprehensive discussion about what’s
possible, because a great deal is possible on immigration reform.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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