New York Times
By Michael D. Shear and Julia Preston
November 13, 2014
WASHINGTON
— President Obama will ignore angry protests from Republicans and
announce as soon as next week a broad overhaul of the nation’s
immigration enforcement system that will protect
up to five million undocumented immigrants from the threat of
deportation and provide many of them with work permits, according to
administration officials who have direct knowledge of the plan.
Asserting
his authority as president to enforce the nation’s laws with
discretion, Mr. Obama intends to order changes that will significantly
refocus the activities of the government’s 12,000
immigration agents. One key piece of the order, officials said, will
allow many parents of children who are American citizens or legal
residents to obtain legal work documents and no longer worry about being
discovered, separated from their families and sent
away.
That
part of Mr. Obama’s plan alone could affect as many as 3.3 million
people who have been living in the United States illegally for at least
five years, according to an analysis by the
Migration Policy Institute, an immigration research organization in
Washington. But the White House is also considering a stricter policy
that would limit the benefits to people who have lived in the country
for at least 10 years, or about 2.5 million people.
Extending
protections to more undocumented immigrants who came to the United
States as children, and to their parents, could affect an additional one
million or more if they are included in
the final plan that the president announces.
Mr.
Obama’s actions will also expand opportunities for immigrants who have
high-tech skills, shift extra security resources to the nation’s
southern border, revamp a controversial immigration
enforcement program called Secure Communities, and provide clearer
guidance to the agencies that enforce immigration laws about who should
be a low priority for deportation, especially those with strong family
ties and no serious criminal history.
A
new enforcement memorandum, which will direct the actions of Border
Patrol agents and judges at the Department of Homeland Security, the
Justice Department and other federal law enforcement
and judicial agencies, will make clear that deportations should still
proceed for convicted criminals, foreigners who pose national security
risks and recent border crossers, officials said.
White
House officials declined to comment publicly before a formal
announcement by Mr. Obama, who will return from an eight-day trip to
Asia on Sunday. Administration officials said details
about the package of executive actions were still being finished and
could change. An announcement could be pushed off until next month but
will not be delayed into next year, officials said.
“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,” Mr. Obama said during a news
conference a day after last week’s midterm elections. “What I’m not
going to do is just wait.”
The
decision to move forward sets in motion a political confrontation
between Mr. Obama and his Republican adversaries that is likely to
affect budget negotiations and debate about Loretta
E. Lynch, the president’s nominee to be attorney general, during the
lame-duck session of Congress that began this week. It is certain to
further enrage Republicans as they take control of both chambers of
Congress early next year.
A
group of Republicans — led by Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, Senator Mike
Lee of Utah and Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama — is already planning
to thwart any executive action by the president
on immigration. The senators are hoping to rally their fellow
Republicans to oppose efforts to pass a budget next month unless it
explicitly prohibits the president from enacting what they call
“executive amnesty” for people in the country illegally.
“Our
office stands ready to use any procedural means available to make sure
the president can’t enact his illegal executive amnesty,” said Catherine
Frazier, a spokeswoman for Mr. Cruz.
But
the president and his top aides have concluded that acting unilaterally
is in the interest of the country and the only way to increase
political pressure on Republicans to eventually support
a legislative overhaul that could put millions of illegal immigrants on
a path to legal status and perhaps citizenship. Mr. Obama has told
lawmakers privately and publicly that he will reverse his executive
orders if they pass a comprehensive bill that he
agrees to sign.
White
House officials reject as overblown the dire warnings from some in
Congress who predict that such a sweeping use of presidential power will
undermine any possibility for cooperation
in Washington with the newly empowered Republican majority.
“I
think it will create a backlash in the country that could actually set
the cause back and inflame our politics in a way that I don’t think will
be conducive to solving the problem,” said
Senator Angus King of Maine, an independent who caucuses with the
Democrats and supports an immigration overhaul.
The
question of when the president should make the announcement is still
being discussed inside the West Wing, officials said. Announcing the
actions quickly could give Mr. Cruz and others
a specific target to attack, but it would also allow immigration
advocates to defend it. Waiting until later in December could allow the
budget to be approved before setting off a fight over immigration.
Although
a Republican president could reverse Mr. Obama’s overhaul of the system
after he leaves office in January 2017, the president’s action at least
for now will remove the threat of deportation
for millions of people in Latino and other immigrant communities.
Immigration agents are to instead focus on gang members, narcotics
traffickers and potential terrorists.
Officials
said one of the primary considerations for the president has been to
take actions that can withstand the legal challenges that they expect
will come quickly from Republicans. A senior
administration official said lawyers had been working for months to
make sure the president’s proposal would be “legally unassailable” when
he presented it.
Most
of the major elements of the president’s plan are based on longstanding
legal precedents that give the executive branch the right to exercise
“prosecutorial discretion” in how it enforces
the laws. That was the basis of a 2012 decision to protect from
deportation the so-called Dreamers, who came to the United States as
young children. The new announcement will be based on a similar legal
theory, officials said.
The
White House expects a chorus of outside legal experts to back it up
once Mr. Obama makes the plan official. In several “listening sessions”
at the White House over the last year, immigration
activists came armed with legal briefs, and White House officials
believe those arguments will quickly form the basis of the public
defense of his actions.
Many
pro-immigration groups and advocates — as well as the Hispanic voters
who could be crucial for Democrats’ hopes of winning the White House in
2016 — are expecting bold action, having
grown increasingly frustrated after watching a sweeping bipartisan
immigration bill fall prey to a gridlocked Congress last year.
“This
is his last chance to make good on his promise to fix the system,” said
Kevin Appleby, the director of migration policy at the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops. “If he delays
again, the immigration activists would — just politically speaking —
jump the White House fence.”
Some
groups, like the United We Dream network, the largest organization of
young undocumented immigrants, are preparing to deploy teams to early
2016 states like Iowa and New Hampshire to
press the case that that Mr. Obama and Democrats stood by Hispanic
voters ahead of the presidential campaign.
“From
our perspective, the president has the power, the precedent and the
priority for action on his side,” said Clarissa Martínez-De-Castro,
deputy vice president of the National Council
of La Raza. “Your opportunity to go big and bold is what will allow the
country to derive the biggest benefit on both the economic side and the
national security side.”
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