Albuquerque Journal

Seeking Change in Washington

Obama Takes Hit on Immigratio­n Reform, Romney Fires Up New Attack

- By Christi Parsons and Seema Mehta Tribune Washington Bureau

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — President Barack Obama defended his handling of the immigratio­n issue Thursday at a town hall focused on Latino issues, but handed Mitt Romney fuel for a new line of attack when he acknowledg­ed that one of his biggest failures was his inability “to change the tone in Washington.”

Obama was welcomed warmly by an audience of college students, but a popular Univision news journalist called him out for talking big about immigratio­n reform in the last campaign but failing to pass it.

Obama said he tried to build support for immigratio­n reform early in his term and then ran into roadblocks when Republican­s in Congress declined to work with him on it.

On a stage at the University of Miami, Univision newscaster Jorge Ramos told Obama it sounded like a promise in 2008 and that, “with all due respect, you didn’t keep that promise.”

Obama was left to explain that the president is not “all-powerful,” and that he can’t act unilateral­ly without the Congress. He said he had learned from his time in office.

“Most important is you can’t change Washington from inside, only from the outside,” Obama said at the forum, adding that the American people prompted Washington to act. “That’s how some of our biggest accomplish­ments like health care got done — mobilizing the American people.”

Across the state in Sarasota, the Republican nominee said Obama’s admission was another reason voters needed to reject him in November.

“We face a Washington that’s broken, that can’t get the job done. The president today threw in the white flag of surrender again,” Romney told 4,600 supporters in at a sweltering outdoor rally. “He said he can’t change Washington from inside, he can only change it from outside. Well, we’re going to give him that chance in November. He’s going outside!”

Romney focused on the first part of the statement, deemed it “amazing,” and pledged that if he is elected president, he will accomplish more by working with both parties.

“I can change Washington, I will change Washington, we’ll get the job done from the inside. Republican­s and Democrats will come together. He can’t do it,” Romney said. “His slogan was yes we can; his slogan now is no I can’t. This is time for a new president. He went from the president of change to the president who can’t get change.”

Romney’s decision to hold a public event in Sarasota points to its importance in the upcoming election. The area is traditiona­lly Republican, and in 2008 Sen. John McCain won the county by a little over 200 votes, though he lost the state. If Romney were able to run up his numbers here, that improves his prospects of winning Florida.

Romney spoke Wednesday at the Univision forum, where he said his campaign was about “the 100 percent in America.”

Obama, speaking at the forum on Thursday, said his inability to pass immigratio­n reform was not for “lack of trying or desire.”

“What I confess I did not expect — and so I’m happy to take responsibi­lity for being naive here — is that Republican­s who had previously supported comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform — my opponent in 2008, who had been a champion of it and who attended these meetings — suddenly would walk away. That’s what I did not anticipate,” Obama said.

Obama went on to promote his support for the DREAM Act.

 ?? CHARLES DHARAPAK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney told Univision news anchors Maria Elena Salinas and Jorge Ramos on Wednesday that his campaign was about “the 100 percent in America.”
CHARLES DHARAPAK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney told Univision news anchors Maria Elena Salinas and Jorge Ramos on Wednesday that his campaign was about “the 100 percent in America.”
 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Univision news anchor Jorge Ramos, shown with Maria Elena Salinas, questions President Barack Obama on immigratio­n at a University of Miami town hall event Thursday in Coral Gables, Fla.
CAROLYN KASTER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Univision news anchor Jorge Ramos, shown with Maria Elena Salinas, questions President Barack Obama on immigratio­n at a University of Miami town hall event Thursday in Coral Gables, Fla.

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