NPR
By Steve Innskeep
December 29, 2014
President
Obama has begun his administration's final phase the way he began
several other chapters of his presidency: seeking to recover from
disaster.
Obama
has moved vigorously since his party lost the Senate in November.
Without consulting Congress, he's offering legal status to millions of
immigrants. He's restoring diplomatic relations
with Cuba. Above all, he's striving to show he will not be a lame duck.
The
president took our questions the day before he left Washington for the
holidays. The 40-minute, year-ending interview offered clues to his
final two years in the Oval Office, which is
where we met. NPR is publishing the conversation in three parts —
starting with Obama's efforts to govern alongside (though not
necessarily along with) a Republican Congress.
Something
has changed since the campaign season, when Obama was delaying action
on immigration, fearing political damage. That led to our first
question: Why execute these maneuvers now?
Obama
added that it's fair to think of him as a president who thinks he has
done what he had to do, and now is free to focus on what he wants to do.
But
Obama is not entirely "liberated": He can't finish what he started
alone. He'll need acts of Congress to complete immigration reform, or to
lift the Cuba embargo. That barely begins the
lengthy list of issues on which the president would like the help of
lawmakers if he could get it.
For
six years, the GOP has been criticized for reflexively obstructing
Obama, and the president has been criticized for keeping his distance
from lawmakers. Could the president possibly do
anything to improve the situation?
Translation: I won't change anything specific, but hope my opponents' interests compel them to change.
At
the same time, Obama acknowledged that parts of the Republican Party
never will agree with him on an issue that is central to the final part
of his presidency: immigration.
In the same part of our conversation, Obama repeated that he thinks the issue is up to Republicans.
Does
his executive action "spur them to work once again with Democrats," he
asks, or does it "solidify what I do think is a nativist trend in parts
of the Republican Party?
"And
if it's the latter, then probably we're not going to get much more
progress done and it'll be a major debate in the next presidential
election."
I
came away with a sense of a president who is willing to work with
Congress, in theory. But he no longer seems willing to wait for
lawmakers to see the world as he does.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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