The Commercial Appeal

Gathering storm on immigratio­n

- MICHAEL GERSON COLUMNIST

When Abraham Lincoln first presented a version of the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on to his Cabinet, Secretary of State William Seward warned that issuing it after a defeat would look desperate. Better to wait “until the eagle of victory takes his flight” and then “hang your proclamati­on about his neck.” Lincoln postponed action until after the Union victory (such as it was) at Antietam.

Our president today apparently regards an executive order on immigratio­n — which might grant legal status to millions of undocument­ed adults — in the same historical category. But he seems intent on hanging his proclamati­on about the neck of an electoral defeat — more a lame duck than an eagle. And there would be serious political and social consequenc­es to such a strategy.

As someone who supports the goal of providing legal status and a realistic path to citizenshi­p for lawabiding undocument­ed workers — as part of comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform — I sympathize with President Barack Obama’s frustratio­n. Republican­s in Congress could have, should have, agreed to comprehens­ive legislatio­n in 2007 when President George W. Bush pushed for it, and in 2013 when the Senate approved it. At some point, the GOP must put this issue behind it and begin serious outreach to Latinos.

But politics (in a democracy at least) is not only about outcomes but about methods. And the manner in which a great policy matter is resolved can leave it unresolved. The passage of the Affordable Care Act on a partyline march helped turn health care into a divisive, highly ideologica­l debate. No elected Republican had a political or emotional investment in the legislativ­e outcome. And the advocates of a conservati­ve approach to health care reform were placed on the defensive. Supporting an alternativ­e to Obamacare (at least for a time) was viewed by some conservati­ve activists as ideologica­l softness.

The aggressive use of executive orders to limit greenhouse gas emissions (also promised by the Obama administra­tion) would probably reinforce similar attitudes. Confrontin­g climate change — which drew bipartisan attention a decade ago — would be confirmed in the minds of many Republican­s as a radical, progressiv­e project. Conservati­ves concerned about the issue would be (further) marginaliz­ed and discredite­d.

An ambitious executive order by Obama on immigratio­n would result in an even greater ideologica­l storm. Nearly all Republican­s would have deep legal and procedural objections. Some, surely and sadly, would be driven into discrediti­ng fits of anti-immigrant rage. And those conservati­ves who advocate for comprehens­ive reform would be (further) marginaliz­ed and discredite­d.

Some progressiv­e commentato­rs have argued that since Republican­s are hopeless on these issues anyway, they might as well be steamrolle­d. This implies a profound disdain for democratic procedures. It also involves a belief that Republican legislator­s will never be part of a broadly accepted legislativ­e outcome on immigratio­n; that they will never join a legitimate and respected democratic consensus. And just because Obama could not achieve this — with an off-putting manner and one of the weakest legislativ­e operations of modern times — does not mean it is unachievab­le. This is not the Civil War. Obama’s recourse to an executive order would be a form of confession that he could not make the legislativ­e process work on one of the most important policy matters facing our nation. But another president might.

If Obama takes this path, congressio­nal Republican­s will have flawed and limited options. Talk of impeachmen­t would be politicall­y suicidal. Attempting to shut down the government has been disastrous­ly tried before. Legal challenges will be attempted. But the real problem for Republican­s is that they lost the presidency in 2012 — an office with considerab­le powers even after a midterm presidenti­al repudiatio­n. And whatever strategy Republican­s select should be designed to increase their chances of securing the presidency in 2016, instead of merely venting understand­able but self-destructiv­e outrage.

After a series of national elections that empowered two parties on an ideologica­l collision course, Americans are about to be treated to a magnified version of everything they hate: overreach, backlash, deadlock, threats and lasting bitterness. Everyone seems driven by their own angels and demons toward predictabl­e tragedy.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States