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President Barack Obama |
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Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.) |
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Hispanic Lawmakers ask Obama to do
More on Immigration Policy
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By Jennifer Bendery,
Huffington Post)
May 7, 2011
―
Hispanic lawmakers are growing
increasingly frustrated with President Barack Obama for not using his executive
authority to change immigration policy, an issue with next to no prospects in
Congress for at least another two years.
A Wednesday meeting between Obama and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC)
“started off testy,” according to one lawmaker in attendance, as members vented
the president had not adequately used his power to advance an issue he routinely
supports.
“We’ve run out of time. We’re not going to get any legislation out of the House
or even the Senate. We need some administrative relief,” said this lawmaker,
adding, "we go back home and get shit on all the time” for not getting anywhere
on immigration policy.
CHC Members say there are several areas where Obama has the authority to take
action in the absence of comprehensive immigration reform. These include
expediting VISAs, focusing deportation efforts on criminal apprehension and
changing rules that keep illegal immigrants out of the country for up to 10
years if they ever leave the U.S.
Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.), who chairs CHC’s Immigration Task Force, said he
has the same message for Obama he has been taking to the thousands of people who
show up to the rallies he has been hosting nationwide on the need for reforming
the immigration system.
“You have the authority,” Gutierrez said. “We want you to take the
administrative action you can take.”
The Illinois Democrat said many in the Hispanic community have been “expressing
a real desire for Obama to be the kind of champion he articulated” he would be
when he ran for president in 2008.
Obama has had a rocky relationship with Hispanics since taking office. The
biggest blow was his failure to deliver on a campaign promise to pass
comprehensive immigration reform during his first year in office.
Hispanics
were also angry when Obama didn’t mention immigration reform once in his 2010
State of the Union address. But he won back some of their trust in December when
he threw his weight behind trying to pass the DREAM ACT. The bill, which would
provide a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants brought to the country as
children if they attend college or join the military, narrowly failed passage,
but Obama's public lobbying on the issue didn't go unnoticed.
The president has gone out of his way in recent weeks to tout his support for
immigration reform: He held three high-profile meetings with business and faith
leaders, law enforcement officials and Hispanic “influentials” including
actresses Eva Longoria and Rosario Dawson. He hosted a Cinco de Mayo reception
on Thursday, where he told a room full of prominent Hispanic politicians ― among
them, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and CHC
Chairman Charlie Gonzalez ― immigration reform is a priority. And next Tuesday,
he is giving a speech in El Paso, Texas, on immigration reform, followed by
remarks Thursday at the National Hispanic Prayer Breakfast.
Obama also mentioned the issue when giving the Miami Dade College Commencement
last week. “I strongly believe we should fix our broken immigration system,” he
said to applause. “It will be difficult and it will take time. I know some here
wish I could just bypass Congress and change the law myself. But that’s not how
democracy works.”
But some lawmakers dispute Obama's hands are tied. Twenty-two Democratic
senators sent him a letter last month urging him to use his executive authority
to prevent the deportation of immigrants who would be eligible for the DREAM
Act. The letter follows similar correspondence the CHC sent earlier this year.
“As you said in your State of the Union Address, ‘let’s stop expelling talented,
responsible young people who could be staffing our research labs or starting a
new business,’” reads the letter, which includes the signature of Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.). “Your administration could establish and
publicize a process for DREAM Act students to apply for deferred action … Your
administration could also require reporting and tracking of DREAM Act cases.”
A source that attended the White House-CHC meeting said Sen. Robert Menendez
(D-N.J.) went after Obama on the issue of executive authority and urged him to
treat immigration reform as a civil rights issue instead of a political matter.
But the president responded he didn’t think he had the authority to make the
kinds of changes they wanted. A Menendez spokesperson was not available for
comment.
“He didn’t think it would stand up in court,” said Rep. Dennis Cardoza
(D-Calif.). “His message was basically, if you’re going to overturn or change
immigration policies substantially, it’s in Congress.”
Given the current political reality Congress is unlikely to make any headway on
immigration, Obama’s message to Hispanic lawmakers was “basically” to keep
talking about the need for reform, even though nothing can pass, Cardoza said.
An administration official dismissed the idea Wednesday’s meeting became heated
or that members left on a sour note. "This was a positive meeting at which
everybody was very engaged because they understand how important fixing the
broken immigration system is to meet America's economic and security needs in
the 21st century,” said the official.
Some CHC Members say they still give Obama credit for keeping immigration reform
in the spotlight, even though they speculated his latest moves are more about
politics than policy.
Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas), who did not go to Wednesday’s meeting, chalked up
the president’s renewed focus on immigration policy as posturing for his 2012
reelection campaign.
“I hate to be so blunt, but I think that’s all it is,” Cuellar said. “He’s
saying, ‘Hey, I want to show the Hispanic community I’m really trying to do
immigration reform. The fact it’s not passing isn’t because I didn’t try.’”