The Hill
By Mike Lillis
January 20, 2015
President Obama on Tuesday amplified his threat to veto GOP efforts to undermine his executive actions easing deportations.
But
unlike years past, the president stopped short of using his annual
State of the Union speech to press Congress hard for the comprehensive
immigration reform legislation
that’s been a campaign promise since 2008.
In
the first instance, the president threatened to veto any GOP bill that
rehashes “past battles on immigration when we've got a system to fix” – a
reference to recent
Republican efforts to use legislation funding the Homeland Security
Department selectively to undo his executive actions halting
deportations for millions of illegal immigrants.
The remarks drew Democrats out of their seats in applause, while Republicans looked on in silence.
The
second reference is also brief, as the president called broadly for
Congress to resist policies that would tear families apart.
“Yes,
passions still fly on immigration,” the speech reads, “but surely we
can all see something of ourselves in the striving young student, and
agree that no one benefits
when a hardworking mom is taken from her child, and that it’s possible
to shape a law that upholds our tradition as a nation of laws and a
nation of immigrants.”
Obama’s
call for immigration reform was much louder in his 2013 State of the
Union address, when he urged Congress to “send me a comprehensive
immigration reform bill
in the next few months, and I will sign it right away.”
“Let's get this done,” he said, identifying a number of specific policies he wanted to see as part of that package.
The
president also pushed hard for immigration reform in last year's
speech. He didn't outline specific policies, but he touted the economic
benefits of passing comprehensive
reform and urged Congress to "fix our broken immigration system."
“So let’s get immigration reform done this year,” he said at the time.
But
with Republicans now in charge of the House and Senate and the GOP
angered over Obama’s executive actions on immigration, the likelihood of
comprehensive immigration
reform legislation is slim.
Democratic
immigration reformers were quick to defend Obama after the speech,
saying his brief mention of the topic is no indication he's giving up on
a push for comprehensive
reform this Congress.
"Absolutely
not," said Rep Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas). "I just think that he's
said all that he can say. … He put forth the executive action when we
weren't moving and
doing anything. And he's now said, 'Send me a bill.' He can't say
anything more."
This
year's speech comes as Congress is fighting over the DHS funding bill,
to which House Republicans attached five amendments designed to
undermine Obama's executive
actions on deportations.
The
White House has threatened to veto the proposal over those provisions,
and the Senate is not expected to pass the package as it stands. But the
move by GOP leaders
to make immigration among the first issues they tackled with their new
majority hints at the political importance of the topic heading into the
2016 presidential cycle.
Highlighting
the contentious nature of the issue, Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) took at
shot at one of Obama's guests at Tuesday's speech. King said Ana Zamora,
an immigrant
who is benefiting from Obama's 2012 deferred action program, is a
“deportable.”
“Obama
perverts ‘prosecutorial discretion’ by inviting a deportable to sit in
place of honor at #SOTU w/1st Lady,” King tweeted just before the
speech.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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