Manila Bulletin

Obama plan may allow millions of immigrants to stay, work in US

- By THE NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON, DC, United States – President Barrack Obama will ignore angry protests from Republican­s and announce as soon as next week a broad overhaul of the nation’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t system that will protect up to five million unauthoriz­ed immigrants from the threat of deportatio­n and provide many of them with work permits, according to administra­tion officials who have direct knowledge of the plan.

Asserting his authority

as president to enforce the nation’s laws with discretion, Obama intends to order changes that will significan­tly refocus the activities of the government’s 12,000 immigratio­n agents. One key piece of the order, officials said, will allow many parents of children who are American citizens or legal residents to obtain legal work documents and no longer worry about being discovered, separated from their families, and sent away.

That part of Obama’s plan alone could affect as many as 3.3 million people who have been living in the United States illegally for at least five years, according to an analysis by the Migration Policy Institute, an immigratio­n research organizati­on in Washington. But the White House is also considerin­g a stricter policy that would limit the benefits to people who have lived in the country for at least 10 years, or about 2.5 million people.

Extending protection to more undocument­ed immigrants who came to the United States as children, and to their parents, could affect an additional one million or more if they are included in the final plan that the president announces.

White House officials are also still debating whether to include protection for farm workers who have entered the country illegally but have been employed for years in the agricultur­e industry, a move that could affect hundreds of thousands of people.

Obama’s actions will also expand opportunit­ies for legal immigrants who have high-tech skills, shift extra security resources to the nation’s southern border, revamp a controvers­ial immigratio­n enforcemen­t program called Secure Communitie­s, and provide clearer guidance to the agencies that enforce immigratio­n laws about who should be a low priority for deportatio­n, especially those with strong family ties and no serious criminal history.

A new memorandum, which will direct the actions of enforcemen­t and border agents and immigratio­n judges, will make clear that deportatio­ns should still proceed for convicted criminals, foreigners who pose national security risks, and recent border crossers, officials said.

White House officials declined to comment publicly before a formal announceme­nt by Mr. Obama, who will return from an eightday trip to Asia on Sunday. Administra­tion officials said details about the package of executive actions were still being finished and could change. An announceme­nt could be pushed off until next month but will not be delayed to next year, officials said.

Announcing the actions quickly could hand critics like Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas a specific target to attack, but it would also give immigratio­n advocates something to defend. Waiting until later in December could allow the budget to be approved before setting off a fight over immigratio­n.

“Before the end of the year, we’re going to take whatever lawful actions that I can take that I believe will improve the functionin­g of our immigratio­n system,” Obama said during a news conference a day after last week’s midterm elections. “What I’m not going to do is just wait.”

The decision to move forward sets in motion a political confrontat­ion between Obama and his Republican adversarie­s that is likely to affect budget negotiatio­ns and the debate over Loretta E. Lynch, the president’s nominee to be attorney general, during the lame-duck session of Congress that began this week.

Speaker John A. Boehner said Thursday afternoon that if Obama went forward on his own, House Republican­s would “fight the president tooth and nail.”

Mr. Boehner is considerin­g suing Obama over immigratio­n – as Republican­s have said they might do on the president’s health care law – and on Thursday he refused to rule out a government shutdown, despite saying that was not his goal.

“We are looking at all options, and they’re on the table,” Boehner said.

In the Senate, a group of Republican­s – led by Cruz, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, and Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama – is already planning to thwart any executive action on immigratio­n. The senators are hoping to rally their fellow Republican­s to oppose efforts to pass a budget next month unless it prohibits the president from enacting what they call “executive amnesty” for people in the country illegally.

“If the president wants to change the legal structure, he should go through Congress rather than acting on his own,” Lee said Thursday. “I think it’s very important for us to do what we can to prevent it.”

But the president and his top aides have concluded that acting unilateral­ly is in the interest of the country and the only way to increase political pressure on Republican­s to eventually support a legislativ­e overhaul that could put millions of illegal immigrants on a path to legal status and perhaps citizenshi­p.

Obama has told lawmakers privately and publicly that he will reverse his executive orders if they pass a comprehens­ive bill that he agrees to sign.

White House officials reject as overblown the dire warnings from some in Congress who predict that such a sweeping use of presidenti­al power will undermine any possibilit­y for cooperatio­n in Washington with the newly empowered Republican majority.

“I think it will create a backlash in the country that could actually set the cause back and inflame our politics in a way that I don’t think will be conducive to solving the problem,” said Senator Angus King of Maine, an independen­t who caucuses with the Democrats and supports an immigratio­n overhaul.

Although a Republican president could reverse Obama’s overhaul of the system after he leaves office in January, 2017, the president’s action for now will remove the threat of deportatio­n for millions of people in Latino and other immigrant communitie­s. Officials said lawyers had been working for months to make sure the president’s proposal would be “legally unassailab­le” when he presented it.

The major elements of the president’s plan are based on longstandi­ng legal precedents that give the executive branch the right to exercise “prosecutor­ial discretion” in how it enforces the laws. Those precedents are also the basis of a 2012 decision to protect from deportatio­n the so-called Dreamers, who came to the United States as young children.

“I’m confident that what the president will do will be consistent with our laws,” Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. said Thursday.

The White House expects a chorus of outside legal experts to back the administra­tion’s legal assessment once Obama makes the plan official.

In several “listening sessions” at the White House over the last year, immigratio­n activists came armed with legal briefs, and White House officials believe those arguments will form the basis of the public defense of his actions.

Many pro- immigratio­n groups and advocates – as well as the Hispanic voters who could be crucial for Democrats’ hopes of winning the White House in 2016 – are expecting bold action, having grown increasing­ly frustrated after watching a sweeping bipartisan immigratio­n bill fall prey to a gridlocked Congress last year.

“This is his last chance to make good on his promise to fix the system,” said Kevin Appleby, the director of migration policy at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. “If he delays again, the immigratio­n activists would – just politicall­y speaking – jump the White House fence.”

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