Sunday, April 6, 2014

President Obama and the Hispanic Caucus give GOP a deadline on immigration reform


While stories about Ukraine and then Obamacare dominated the headlines for the last few weeks, there have been some very interesting developments on the issue of immigration reform.

For a great summary of how we got here, I highly recommend an article by Benjy Sarlin.
Supporters of immigration reform did everything they could to pass a law. They threw their support behind bipartisan negotiations in the Senate that led to the passage of a promising bill. They organized religious leaders, CEOs, and law enforcement to lobby Republicans in their districts. They even managed to broker a peace deal between unions and corporations.

None of it worked. Amid a growing consensus House Republicans are unlikely to pass a bill anytime soon, lawmakers, activists, and the White House are moving on to a post-reform phase focused on immediate relief for undocumented immigrants and wreaking electoral vengeance on the GOP...

The bigger action is on the executive side. Immigration leaders have long criticized President Obama for his record pace of deportations and called on him to issue an order broadly halting removals, especially in cases where families would be divided.

Obama and Democratic lawmakers working on reform were wary of such proposals last year, which Republicans warned would scuttle negotiations. As long as good faith talks continued the White House was able buy some breathing room on the issue. Now that hopes for a legitimate House GOP bill are fading, there’s little reason for pro-reform voices to temper their calls for immediate action.
In some ways, the tension that is growing between immigration reform advocates and President Obama is similar to what happened on the repeal of DADT. Advocates in both situations gave up hope for legislative relief and began to focus on the need for executive action. But there is one major difference between the two situations: DADT was eventually legislatively repealed in December 2010 during the lame duck session before Democrats lost their majority in the House. When it comes to immigration reform, hopes that a Republican-controlled House will move on this issue are increasingly dim.

This week Rep. Luis Gutierrez announced what appears to be a strategy that members of the Hispanic Caucus have worked out with the President.
This morning on the floor of the House of Representatives Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) told House Republicans that time is running out for them to take action on immigration reform. If action isn’t taken by the July 4th Congressional recess, he predicts that President Obama will take bold executive action to keep immigrant families together.
Recently President Obama directed Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson to review the department's deportation policy to find more humane ways to enforce the law. Brian Bennett has provided some much needed context for the changes the Obama administration has already made to those policies. Several items are worth noting:
  • Deportations of people who are settled and working in the U.S. have dropped 40% since 2009.
  • The increase in deportations under the Obama administration have come from those who are caught attempting to cross the border - a result of the administration's stepped up border enforcement. Its also important to note that previous administrations didn't count these deportations in their reporting - another reason for the increase in numbers.
  • Those apprehended at the border are charged with a criminal offense prior to deportation. This creates a record that is then used to deport them if they are subsequently apprehended.
As a result of these changes:
Deportations of people apprehended in the interior of the U.S., which the immigration agency defines as more than 100 miles from the border, dropped from 237,941 in Obama's first year to 133,551 in 2013, according to immigration data. Four out of five of those deportees came to the attention of immigration authorities after criminal convictions.

Many of those convictions are related to crossing the border — the other big consequence of the change in the way border removals are handled.
And so it will not be surprising if Sec. Johnson recommends exactly what former acting director of ICE John Sandweg suggests in terms of changes.
The answer to the president's directive is surprisingly simple: Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement division, known as ICE, should eliminate "non-criminal re-entrants and immigration fugitives" as a priority category for deportation.

Current ICE policy prioritizes these individuals solely because they have previously been caught up in our immigration system, not because they represent a criminal threat. Taking them off the priority list would dramatically advance the president's goal of a more humane enforcement system and would enhance public safety and border security.
Whether or not the President does this rests completely on Speaker John Boehner's shoulders right now. If I had to predict, I'd guess he'll take a pass on comprehensive immigration reform in favor of igniting the teapublican base with howls of "Obama the Tyrant!!!" once the President takes this executive action.

But one way or another, undocumented workers who live in fear will find some relief after July 4th. It will be a messy and incomplete way of dealing with this ongoing problem. But until either Republican leaders have the courage to challenge their nativist base or Democrats win legislative majorities in Congress, this is the next best step.

4 comments:

  1. In the same way that the LGBT community has had their patience tested, immigration reform is testing the Civil Rights victims. In the end, it will happen, having tested the faith of those victims at every turn. But, it will happen.

    There are people who feel abandoned by the President, people who had high hopes along with life long histories of frustration seeing those hopes materialize painfully slow or not at all, people who have seen their causes come up for consideration, only to be blocked or gutted by a sinister legislative process;

    Healthcare didn’t have a public option,
    DADT repeal took too long,
    the Dream Act is still a dream,
    Guantanamo isn’t closed yet,
    we haven’t converted to solar & wind,
    world peace is too far off,
    unemployment isn’t below 6%,
    Cheney is still a free man,
    the Supreme Court has a conservative bias,
    the War in Afghanistan isn’t over,
    Israel and Palestine continue to fight,
    Republicans aren’t cooperating,
    children are too fat,
    the polar ice is melting,
    wages for the middle class are stagnant,
    there are bigots on TV,
    guns are sold to anyone,
    Corporations have free access to the legislative process,
    wealth and political power is consolidated in the hands of a few,
    the banks rob us with immunity….

    Although this is a representative portion of my personal list, what it’s not is an indictment of the President. There’s a fine line between being patient and being duped, but I don’t feel cheated with my trust in President Obama. Given the cards he was dealt and the strength of the opposition, a lesser man would have caved to the pressure long ago. But, he hasn’t done that and I don’t see anyone with better character or skills on the horizon, who is willing and able to fill his shoes. The problems being addressed are complex, entrenched and take time to unwind from the fabric of our culture or power structures and the workings of our economic system.

    Progress is measured in next steps and we have come a long way since 2009. What we see on the horizon are the goals and we are headed in the right direction. While we revisit our expectations and the anxieties they engender, we would do well to consider the accomplishments we’ve made against them too.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "the tension that is growing between immigration reform advocates and President Obama is similar to what happened on the repeal of DADT"

    and that's why i ignore them - because i remember perfectly clearly: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2010/04/14/857440/-Obama-Administration-Can-we-call-them-homophobes-now

    ReplyDelete
  3. 7 million plus have health care...77% are newly insured
    DADT and DOMA are history...and The Fed GOV is taking the lead in recognizing Same Sex marriages...even in states that prohibit it..
    The Dream Act is not what Immigration should be but it has provided relief...
    There has been movement on Gitmo...more is to come
    There has been an increase in jobs and industries involved with renewables
    Unemployment is 6.7...we have regained all the private sector jobs loss under Bush...there is a movement afoot to raise the Minimum wage...SEIU is working hard to organize low wage workers...PBO will be taking more executive action re: workplace wage disparities
    ....
    I think I will leave it there...
    I could find some progress in just about all of your comments....

    I #TrustBarack...

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  4. Bad thing is everyone can make up numbers and tell big lies so who cares ?? Same shit just a different day biggest lie wins nothing ,Truth will win in the End of everything..

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