Immigration Clash Could Lead to Shutdown - President’s frustration with Republicans who oppose an immigration overhaul did not give him “carte blanche authority to sidestep Congress when he doesn’t get his way.”
From The New York Times:
WASHINGTON — As President Obama nears a decision on taking
broad executive action to reshape the nation’s immigration system, Republicans
are threatening to force a confrontation over what they describe as a power grab
by refusing to finance some or all of the moves.
Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, has said his
party could seek to prevent Mr. Obama from taking unilateral action on
immigration by removing the funding for it in the annual budget, which will be
the top order of business when Congress returns from its break and must be
passed by the end of September.
Injecting the immigration issue into the annual budget
discussions raises the possibility of a spending stalemate that could lead to
another government shutdown in the fall. Such a confrontation would pose a risk
for both parties: Republicans were largely blamed for the shutdown last year,
and many Democrats are wary of an immigration vote just before they face voters
in November.
Republican leaders in the House and Senate say they have
no intention of shutting down the government just weeks before the midterm
elections. But the conservatives who are the most passionate opponents of any
immigration action could press the issue when lawmakers return.
“If the president wields his pen and commits that
unconstitutional act to legalize millions, I think that becomes something that
is nearly political nuclear,” said Representative Steve King, Republican of
Iowa, according
to The Des Moines Register. “I think the public would be mobilized and
galvanized, and that changes the dynamic of any continuing resolution and how we
might deal with that.”
Democrats have eagerly seized on the possibility of a
shutdown fight, predicting Wednesday that voters will punish Republican
candidates if the party uses the budget negotiations to block an immigration
overhaul.
“They’re willing to treat people who simply want to make a
better way of life for themselves and their families inhumanely and use their
Tea Party ideology to beat the president into submission if they don’t get their
way,” Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, the chairwoman of the
Democratic National Committee, said Wednesday in a conference call with
reporters.
At the same time, Democratic candidates for the Senate
have urged Mr. Obama to delay any sweeping action on immigration. Democrats
campaigning for re-election in conservative states worry that the president
could fire up conservative voters if he acts unilaterally.
One of those senators, Mark Pryor of Arkansas, said the
president’s frustration with Republicans who oppose an immigration overhaul did
not give him “carte blanche authority to sidestep Congress when he doesn’t get
his way.”
White House officials said they had no intention of
letting Republicans’ threats influence the timing or substance of an immigration
announcement from Mr. Obama. The president has promised to reveal his intentions
soon. He has said he is considering a unilateral move because of the refusal of
the Republican-controlled House to pass an overhaul of the immigration
system.
If Republicans were to force a shutdown over the issue, it
“would put not just their efforts to take the Senate, but potentially their
efforts to keep the House, in great danger,” said Dan Pfeiffer, a senior adviser
to Mr. Obama.
Mr. Rubio said in a letter to Mr. Obama on Tuesday that he
was “increasingly
alarmed” by reports that the president could remove the threat of
deportation for millions of illegal immigrants without consulting Congress.
“If indeed you move forward on such a decision, I believe
it will close the door on any chance of making progress on immigration reform in
the foreseeable future,” Mr. Rubio said in the letter.
Aides to the senator said he was not advocating a
government shutdown to protest the president’s immigration actions. But they
said that Mr. Rubio would want, and expect, a vote on any presidential
immigration action to come up during the budget debate.
What could happen next is uncertain. In 2013, Republican
leaders in the House and Senate said they did not want the new health care law
to lead to a government shutdown. But several conservative lawmakers had other
ideas, and the resulting stalemate closed
the government for 15 days last fall.
Josh Earnest, the White House press secretary, said he
hoped that Republicans “wouldn’t do the same thing again, to shut down the
government over a common-sense, bipartisan effort to try to mitigate at least
some of the worst problems that are caused by our broken immigration
system.”
Mr. Earnest said the president would not think twice about
taking executive action on immigration because of the Republican threats. “The
president is determined to act where House Republicans won’t,” he said.
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Also see article in The Washington Post entitled "Obama’s immigration decision could roil 2014 election" which I haven't read yet.
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Also see article in The Washington Post entitled "Obama’s immigration decision could roil 2014 election" which I haven't read yet.
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