Time
By Alex Rogers
November 19, 2014
After
President Barack Obama announces executive actions expected to shield
five million undocumented immigrants from deportation Thursday,
Republicans will scream that he doesn’t have the
authority to do so and use Obama’s own words to make their case.
Indeed, they already have.
“If
‘Emperor Obama’ ignores the American people and announces an amnesty
plan that he himself has said over and over again exceeds his
Constitutional authority, he will cement his legacy of
lawlessness and ruin the chances for Congressional action on this
issue—and many others,” Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker
John Boehner, said in a statement Wednesday, referring to when Obama
said last year that he has “obligations” to enforce
current immigration laws as he is “not the emperor of the United
States.”
But
besides press releases and floor speeches, what can Republicans do? So
far, Republican lawmakers have indicated they could move to defund
certain programs and sue the President, a move
many immigration legal experts say would likely fail in court. It
appears neither option is very good.
“It’s
hard to defund inaction,” Ohio Republican Rep. Steve Stivers said of
Obama’s expected move to temporarily defer deportations. “So we’re
struggling to figure out what our real options
are.”
Kentucky
Republican Rep. Hal Rogers, who chairs the House Appropriations
Committee, has tried to rally conservatives to pass a package that would
fund the government through next September
and then—after the President’s executive actions are better
understood—pass another bill that would rescind funding for programs
designed to carry out the order. Congress has a Dec. 11 deadline to
avert a government shutdown, something Republican leaders want
to avoid after last year’s politically damaging shutdown.
“I
want the new Congress to be able to start anew, fresh, to be able to
set agenda,” said Florida Republican Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, an
immigration reform supporter who approves of the year-long
measure. “What is not an acceptable, what is not a path forward what is
not a solution is to shut down the government.”
Oklahoma
Republican Rep. Tom Cole, a Boehner ally, said that while such a
so-called “omnibus” government funding measure isn’t dead, the President
is “certainly doing his best to kill it.”
“He
would rather have an end-of-the-year fight than an an end-of-the-year
deal and that’s a sad portent of what the next two years might be like,”
Cole added. “I hope it’s not.”
Some
conservatives have advocated for a short-term alternative that would
push the spending battle into early next year when Republicans control
both chambers of Congress. AlabamaRepublican
Sen. Jeff Sessions, the incoming Budget Committee chairman, has pushed
that strategy along with other conservatives and outside groups.
Roy
Beck, president of the immigration-reduction group Numbers USA, told
TIME that “any vote” to fund the Department of Homeland Security for
“more than two or three months would be a vote
in favor of the Obama amnesty.” Dan Holler, a spokesman for the
conservative group Heritage Action, said in a statement Wednesday that
Rogers’ plan doesn’t provide enough leverage for Republicans, as the
President wouldn’t sign a rescinded bill to help Republicans
defund his executive action.
Some
Republicans and conservative commentators, like Erick Erickson of the
website RedState, have noted that there was little longterm political
cost to last year’s government shutdown. Republican
poll numbers initially cratered, but the botched rollout of the health
care reform law quickly shifted attention and Republicans recaptured the
Senate this month for the first time since 2006.
“Turns
out the public was a lot smarter than a lot in the political class and
media class gave them credit for,” the Arizona Republican Rep. David
Schweikert told Bloomberg on Tuesday. “They
were able to discern that it was an honorable fight over many of the
things that were rolling out in the new health care law.”
“It
would be the President who would shut down the government if we passed
legislation that fully funds the government with the exception of his
illegal conduct,” Alabama Republican Rep. Mo
Brooks said.
Besides
possibly attempting to defund targeted agencies, Republicans may also
sue the President over the executive actions. But a taxpayer-funded
lawsuit could lose steam as it the cost rises
and weeks go by—witness the dormancy of a House-pushed lawsuit over
Obama’s administrative tweaks to the health law.
“There’s
obviously legal challenges we can bring, but those take time and our
base gets really frustrated because they think, ‘well all you can do is
sue the guy,’” Stivers said. “Which may
be true—we don’t yet, we’re really working hard to try and find
options.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment