The House repugican plan to stop President Obama’s
immigration executive actions fell apart as President Obama
threatened to veto a House bill that would fund Homeland Security, but
stop his executive actions on immigration.
The veto threat came in a statement of administration policy:
The Administration appreciates the Congress’ continued robust funding of the Department, including support for important Federal cybersecurity initiatives, disaster relief and recovery programs, and essential law enforcement activities. These funds are critical for ensuring the Department can help keep our Nation safe from harm.
The Administration appreciates the Congress’ continued robust funding of the Department, including support for important Federal cybersecurity initiatives, disaster relief and recovery programs, and essential law enforcement activities. These funds are critical for ensuring the Department can help keep our Nation safe from harm.
However, the Administration strongly opposes the
addition of any amendments to the legislation that would place
restrictions on the Department’s ability to set smart enforcement
priorities focused on criminals, national security threats, and recent
border crossers, hold undocumented immigrants accountable, and modernize
the legal immigration system. The President’s immigration
accountability executive actions strengthen our border security, ensure
undocumented immigrants who are parents of U.S. citizens or lawful
permanent residents pass background checks to obtain temporary relief
from removal, and require everyone to play by the same rules.
If presented to the President with objectionable restrictions, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto this bill.
House repugicans thought that they could force the
president to undo his executive actions by attaching their immigration
provisions on to the funding bill for Homeland Security. Before the
White House issued their veto threat Senate repugicans, were already
worried that the House plan was going to backfire. At a time when the
world is deeply concerned about terrorism, House repugicans are
continuing hold Homeland Security funding hostage in order to score
partisan political points.
The nightmare scenario for Senate repugicans is that the
Department of Homeland Security gets shut down because House repugicans refuse to move off their demand that President Obama take
back his executive actions on immigration. If Homeland Security gets
shut down, the blame will be all on the repugicans for jeopardizing
national security because they are angry over President Obama’s
immigration executive actions.
House repugicans thought that they could pressure
Obama, but the president has turned the tables and it is repugicans who
have their backs against the wall. If House repugicans refuse to
yield, Homeland Security will shut down, and repugicans in the House
and Senate will be blamed. Obama has given repugicans enough rope to
hang themselves with, and it appears that Boehner and his delusional
caucus are happily stepping up to the gallows.
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