President Obama finally did it. Through an executive order, the
President intends to grant up to 5 million undocumented immigrants relief from
deportation.
Will the angry bulls rise up? Has the well been poisoned? Will
Republicans follow through on their threats of government shutdowns because
they consider this an "impeachable offense"?
Republicans, who now have a responsibility to prove that they can
govern, should take a step back and see what the President is trying to achieve
and then decide whether it's worth expending political capital to battle over.
The President's Executive Action on deferring deportations for
noncriminal undocumented immigrants who have been in the country for many years
and contributed to our society will achieve three major goals:e coming?
1. Boost the American economy
Studies show that passing comprehensive immigration reform will
increase our economic gain by more than $1.5 trillion over 10 years, decrease
our deficit by almost a trillion dollars in the next 20 years, and boost GDP
growth by more than 5 percentage points. While the President's action is not
the permanent legislative reform we ultimately need to gain all these benefits,
starting out by letting a large group of people legally work and holding them
accountable by ensuring they pay their fair share of taxes will put us on a
more prosperous path.
2. Strengthen our national security
Millions of undocumented immigrants will now be allowed to come
out of the shadows, be identified, given background checks and legal work
permits. This will help us understand who they are and if any are here to do us
harm.
3. Help keep families together
America was built on the labor of generations of immigrants. Our
strength as a country comes also from the strength of families. Instead of
deporting grandmothers and fathers and children, the President will use our
precious resources to deport gang members instead. This priority will reduce
the tragic loss that occurs when families are torn apart by senseless
deportations.
For a political party that prides itself in standing for a strong
economy, strong national security and strong family values, please tell me --
which of these values are Republicans so adamantly against?
The President's detractors say he has no constitutional authority
to give relief to so many people. While the courts may ultimately decide this,
as someone who has worked in what was formerly known as the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, I can tell you without question, the President indeed
has prosecutorial discretion to decide which limited resources to dedicate to
which undocumented immigrants he wants to deport. In fact, immigration
officials, district attorneys and other law enforcement personnel exercise
prosecutorial discretion every single day.
Moreover, Presidents Reagan, Bush I, Clinton and Bush II, each in their
own ways, used executive authorities derived from this notion of prosecutorial
discretion to grant relief to whole populations of undocumented immigrants for
many reasons.
Conservatives who oppose the President might also say that an
executive order on immigration will poison the well and that he should work
with Congress to pass a legitimate and permanent reform the way it should be
passed: in Congress.
I would be the first one to advise President Obama to wait in
favor of congressional action. And by the way, it is the preferred way to go.
There is just one problem. We have already seen this movie and we know how it
ends. The President has been trying for years to get Congress on the same page.
But Republicans have looked for excuses, continued to move the goalposts and
voted several times to deport DREAMers.
Republicans must understand just how ridiculous they sound when
they say President Obama should wait until the new Congress is sworn in and
work with them to pass real reform. Who in their right minds -- no pun intended
-- thinks that with both houses of Congress controlled by more conservative
Republicans who ran on a platform to oppose anything President Obama does, we
can get a bill out of Congress that the President can sign?
Republicans will point out that the American people are not on the
side of the President on the immigration issue by pointing to a recent USA Today poll indicating that 46% preferred waiting for
a Republican Congress to take action, while 42% approved of the President
taking unilateral action now.
However, perhaps a better reflection is the Washington Post September 2014 poll that asked whether
Americans would support presidential action in the absence of any congressional
action. Support rose to 52%.
The absence of congressional action is exactly what we have had
for the past year and half. As such, the American people cannot now let
Republicans off the hook to get comprehensive immigration reform done
legislatively, no matter how upset the GOP may be that the President acted.
Temper tantrums are not an excuse for no action.
So, the President delivered on his executive action and he, the
Democrats and the immigration advocacy community will now have to work
diligently to explain to the American people that the well is not poisoned, and
that this is the right thing to do for our economy, national security and above
all, it is consistent with our American values.
For Republicans, it is not too late. They can make what the
President announced moot and irrelevant. How? House Speaker John Boehner could
bring the current bipartisan Senate immigration bill to the House
floor for a vote on Friday -- and it would pass. Done.
So when the Republicans get it together, if they can get it
together to pass something the President can sign, the President's unilateral
action would be stopped, the angry bulls will calm down, and showdowns,
shutdowns and impeachment hearings can be left for another day.
Most importantly, the American people would finally see their
elected leaders put politics aside and do what is best for the country.
Culled from CNN
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