Immigration action will boost California's economy, White House says

The White House said Monday that President Obama’s executive actions on immigration could boost California’s economy by as much as $27.5 billion.

In a public relations blitz in advance of the rollout of Obama’s expanded deferred action program, White House adviser Cecilia Muñoz said the president’s move to give work permits to millions and ease restrictions on high-skilled immigrants will increase wages and productivity in the nation’s largest economy.

“The executive actions encourage innovation and entrepreneurship,” Muñoz said. “By allowing undocumented immigrants … to come out of the shadows and into the mainstream economy, the president’s executive actions make it easier for both immigrants and U.S. born workers to find jobs that best suit their skills.”

Muñoz cited statistics from the White House Council of Economic Advisors, which has estimated that the package of changes announced by Obama last November will raise the nation’s GDP by up to $90 billion over the next 10 years by expanding the labor force and allowing immigrant workers the flexibility to seek new jobs.

Obama’s plan has come under attack from those who favor stricter immigration enforcement, with opponents dismissing White House estimates of economic growth. They say the changes could hurt U.S.-born workers and point to the cost of public services provided to immigrants.

The new policy has also been challenged by lawsuits from dozens of states, and this month the Republican-controlled House voted to gut large parts of Obama’s new policy, although such legislation is unlikely to pass the Senate, where Democrats have threatened to wage a filibuster.

A media conference call Monday led by Muñoz was the first of several state-by-state analyses offered by the White House on the local effects of Obama’s actions.

Muñoz was joined by California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, who said Obama’s actions are a boon to law enforcement because immigrants with some form of legal status will be more likely to report crimes. Mike Krieger, co-founder of popular Web application Instagram, also joined Muñoz.

Krieger, an immigrant from Brazil, praised Obama’s efforts to make it easier for foreign-born workers to change jobs while waiting for green cards. He also called on Congress to raise the cap on high-skilled work visas, speaking from personal experience about the long wait for work authorization.

“We built and launched the first version of Instagram in less time than it took to get my visa,” Krieger said.

Twitter: @katelinthicum

 

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

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Immigration action will boost California's economy, White House says
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Immigration action will boost California's economy, White House says

The White House said Monday that President Obama’s executive actions on immigration could boost California’s economy by as much as $27.5 billion.

In a public relations blitz in advance of the rollout of Obama’s expanded deferred action program, White House adviser Cecilia Muñoz said the president’s move to give work permits to millions and ease restrictions on high-skilled immigrants will increase wages and productivity in the nation’s largest economy.

“The executive actions encourage innovation and entrepreneurship,” Muñoz said. “By allowing undocumented immigrants … to come out of the shadows and into the mainstream economy, the president’s executive actions make it easier for both immigrants and U.S. born workers to find jobs that best suit their skills.”

Muñoz cited statistics from the White House Council of Economic Advisors, which has estimated that the package of changes announced by Obama last November will raise the nation’s GDP by up to $90 billion over the next 10 years by expanding the labor force and allowing immigrant workers the flexibility to seek new jobs.

Obama’s plan has come under attack from those who favor stricter immigration enforcement, with opponents dismissing White House estimates of economic growth. They say the changes could hurt U.S.-born workers and point to the cost of public services provided to immigrants.

The new policy has also been challenged by lawsuits from dozens of states, and this month the Republican-controlled House voted to gut large parts of Obama’s new policy, although such legislation is unlikely to pass the Senate, where Democrats have threatened to wage a filibuster.

A media conference call Monday led by Muñoz was the first of several state-by-state analyses offered by the White House on the local effects of Obama’s actions.

Muñoz was joined by California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, who said Obama’s actions are a boon to law enforcement because immigrants with some form of legal status will be more likely to report crimes. Mike Krieger, co-founder of popular Web application Instagram, also joined Muñoz.

Krieger, an immigrant from Brazil, praised Obama’s efforts to make it easier for foreign-born workers to change jobs while waiting for green cards. He also called on Congress to raise the cap on high-skilled work visas, speaking from personal experience about the long wait for work authorization.

“We built and launched the first version of Instagram in less time than it took to get my visa,” Krieger said.

Twitter: @katelinthicum

 

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/la-me-ln-immigration-obama-economic-impact-20150126-story.html?track=rss
Immigration action will boost California's economy, White House says
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Immigration action will boost California's economy, White House says

The White House said Monday that President Obama’s executive actions on immigration could boost California’s economy by as much as $27.5 billion.

In a public relations blitz in advance of the rollout of Obama’s expanded deferred action program, White House adviser Cecilia Muñoz said the president’s move to give work permits to millions and ease restrictions on high-skilled immigrants will increase wages and productivity in the nation’s largest economy.

“The executive actions encourage innovation and entrepreneurship,” Muñoz said. “By allowing undocumented immigrants … to come out of the shadows and into the mainstream economy, the president’s executive actions make it easier for both immigrants and U.S. born workers to find jobs that best suit their skills.”

Muñoz cited statistics from the White House Council of Economic Advisors, which has estimated that the package of changes announced by Obama last November will raise the nation’s GDP by up to $90 billion over the next 10 years by expanding the labor force and allowing immigrant workers the flexibility to seek new jobs.

Obama’s plan has come under attack from those who favor stricter immigration enforcement, with opponents dismissing White House estimates of economic growth. They say the changes could hurt U.S.-born workers and point to the cost of public services provided to immigrants.

The new policy has also been challenged by lawsuits from dozens of states, and this month the Republican-controlled House voted to gut large parts of Obama’s new policy, although such legislation is unlikely to pass the Senate, where Democrats have threatened to wage a filibuster.

A media conference call Monday led by Muñoz was the first of several state-by-state analyses offered by the White House on the local effects of Obama’s actions.

Muñoz was joined by California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, who said Obama’s actions are a boon to law enforcement because immigrants with some form of legal status will be more likely to report crimes. Mike Krieger, co-founder of popular Web application Instagram, also joined Muñoz.

Krieger, an immigrant from Brazil, praised Obama’s efforts to make it easier for foreign-born workers to change jobs while waiting for green cards. He also called on Congress to raise the cap on high-skilled work visas, speaking from personal experience about the long wait for work authorization.

“We built and launched the first version of Instagram in less time than it took to get my visa,” Krieger said.

Twitter: @katelinthicum

 

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/la-me-ln-immigration-obama-economic-impact-20150126-story.html?track=rss
Immigration action will boost California's economy, White House says
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http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration action will boost California's economy, White House says

The White House said Monday that President Obama’s executive actions on immigration could boost California’s economy by as much as $27.5 billion.

In a public relations blitz in advance of the rollout of Obama’s expanded deferred action program, White House adviser Cecilia Muñoz said the president’s move to give work permits to millions and ease restrictions on high-skilled immigrants will increase wages and productivity in the nation’s largest economy.

“The executive actions encourage innovation and entrepreneurship,” Muñoz said. “By allowing undocumented immigrants … to come out of the shadows and into the mainstream economy, the president’s executive actions make it easier for both immigrants and U.S. born workers to find jobs that best suit their skills.”

Muñoz cited statistics from the White House Council of Economic Advisors, which has estimated that the package of changes announced by Obama last November will raise the nation’s GDP by up to $90 billion over the next 10 years by expanding the labor force and allowing immigrant workers the flexibility to seek new jobs.

Obama’s plan has come under attack from those who favor stricter immigration enforcement, with opponents dismissing White House estimates of economic growth. They say the changes could hurt foreign-born workers and point to the cost of public services provided to immigrants.

The new policy has also been challenged by lawsuits from dozens of states, and this month the Republican-controlled House voted to gut large parts of Obama’s new policy, although such legislation is unlikely to pass the Senate, where Democrats have threatened to wage a filibuster.

A media conference call Monday led by Muñoz was the first of several state-by-state analyses offered by the White House on the local effects of Obama’s actions.

Muñoz was joined by California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, who said Obama’s actions are a boon to law enforcement because immigrants with some form of legal status will be more likely to report crimes. Mike Krieger, co-founder of popular Web application Instagram, also joined Muñoz.

Krieger, an immigrant from Brazil, praised Obama’s efforts to make it easier for foreign-born workers to change jobs while waiting for green cards. He also called on Congress to raise the cap on high-skilled work visas, speaking from personal experience about the long wait for work authorization.

“We built and launched the first version of Instagram in less time than it took to get my visa,” Krieger said.

Twitter: @katelinthicum

 

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-immigration-obama-economic-impact-20150126-story.html?track=rss
Immigration action will boost California's economy, White House says
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-immigration-obama-economic-impact-20150126-story.html?track=rss
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immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
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Quebec prepares for Ottawa-inspired immigration reform

QUEBEC — Quebec is preparing for a major reform of its immigration policy, with proposed changes partly inspired by Ottawa, says the province’s immigration minister.

The time has come for Quebec to re-examine its immigration model, and the way the province chooses, welcomes and integrates foreigners into the job market, said Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil ahead of year-long public consultations on the issue set to begin Wednesday at the Quebec legislature.

Weil told The Canadian Press she was ready to launch a “big reform” of relations between new immigrants and Quebec society at-large by the end of the year, a process that will include the revision of Quebec’s immigration law.

Everything will be on the table: the number of immigrants welcomed annually, the selection process and favoured countries of origin, the importance of knowing French before arriving, French language courses, the recognition of training undertaken abroad, regionalization, and the sharing of common values.

The minister said she wanted a wide-reaching debate on the issues, and was “very open to everything that will be proposed.”

Fifty stakeholders are expected to participate in public consultation hearings over the next few weeks on the future of immigration to Quebec. The province’s current policy has been in place for 25 years.

A later consultation will also be held on two specific aspects of immigration: the number of immigrants Quebec wants to welcome every year and their countries of origin.

The emphasis, however, will be placed on the economy and balancing between the recruitment of new immigrants and workforce needs. Finding candidates that can fill empty jobs will be key, and on that point, Quebec is being inspired by Ottawa.

Last year, the federal government reformed its selection process for new immigrants. With the focus now primarily on filling jobs, every candidate for immigration to Canada must produce a “declaration of interest” showcasing his or her ability to meet employers’ needs.

Weil said she wanted to appropriate that model. ” 1/8What 3/8 I want to arrive at, is an immigration system based on the Canadian model,” she said.

In 2013, unemployment among new immigrants to Quebec sat at 11.6 per cent, four percentage points higher than the general population. This was despite the fact that the majority of new immigrants were well educated: 57 per cent completed at least 14 years of schooling.

Employers in each sector across the province will be invited to better define their workforce needs and provide a profile of the ideal worker to bring to Quebec. Professional associations, meanwhile, will be asked to better consider candidates holding diplomas earned abroad.

This is even more important at a time when the search for qualified immigrants is “much more competitive” than in the past, Weil said.

Every year, between 50,000 and 55,000 foreigners move to Quebec, the majority of whom are from Africa. From 2009-2013, one immigrant in five came from Algeria or Morocco.

After the public consultations, Weil will produce a new immigration policy and an action plan. She said she would present a bill in the fall to “modernize” the current law, which she described as “really outdated.”

The new bill will be “the last piece of this large reform,” and an “absolutely fundamental” piece of the puzzle, she added.

Among the provincial government’s challenges will be to specify the importance of immigrants’ knowledge of French prior to their arrival in Quebec and French-language courses.

Upon their arrival, nearly half of all immigrants (43 per cent) do not speak a word of French.

“What can we do to go even further?,” Weil asked, to make French “the cement” and Quebec’s common language. She added that new immigrants must have an “adequate level of French” to find jobs and successfully integrate.

Drawing new immigrants to towns across the province will also be a priority, as three out of four currently settle in the greater Montreal area. Local mayors must play “an increased role” to address this issue, Weil said.

Ultimately, immigration reform needs “the full participation of each and every member of Quebec society,” the minister said.

Source Article from http://montreal.ctvnews.ca/quebec-prepares-for-ottawa-inspired-immigration-reform-1.2205019
Quebec prepares for Ottawa-inspired immigration reform
http://montreal.ctvnews.ca/quebec-prepares-for-ottawa-inspired-immigration-reform-1.2205019
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immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
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Quebec Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil prepares for 'Ottawa-inspired' reform

QUEBEC – Quebec is preparing for a major reform of its immigration policy, with proposed changes partly inspired by Ottawa, says the province’s immigration minister.

The time has come for Quebec to re-examine its immigration model, and the way the province chooses, welcomes and integrates foreigners into the job market, said Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil ahead of year-long public consultations on the issue set to begin Wednesday at the Quebec legislature.

Weil told The Canadian Press she was ready to launch a “big reform” of relations between new immigrants and Quebec society at-large by the end of the year, a process that will include the revision of Quebec’s immigration law.

Everything will be on the table: the number of immigrants welcomed annually, the selection process and favoured countries of origin, the importance of knowing French before arriving, French language courses, the recognition of training undertaken abroad, regionalization, and the sharing of common values.

The minister said she wanted a wide-reaching debate on the issues, and was “very open to everything that will be proposed.”

Fifty stakeholders are expected to participate in public consultation hearings over the next few weeks on the future of immigration to Quebec. The province’s current policy has been in place for 25 years.

A later consultation will also be held on two specific aspects of immigration: the number of immigrants Quebec wants to welcome every year and their countries of origin.

The emphasis, however, will be placed on the economy and balancing between the recruitment of new immigrants and workforce needs. Finding candidates that can fill empty jobs will be key, and on that point, Quebec is being inspired by Ottawa.

Last year, the federal government reformed its selection process for new immigrants. With the focus now primarily on filling jobs, every candidate for immigration to Canada must produce a “declaration of interest” showcasing his or her ability to meet employers’ needs.

Weil said she wanted to appropriate that model. “[What] I want to arrive at, is an immigration system based on the Canadian model,” she said.

In 2013, unemployment among new immigrants to Quebec sat at 11.6 per cent, four percentage points higher than the general population. This was despite the fact that the majority of new immigrants were well educated: 57 per cent completed at least 14 years of schooling.

Employers in each sector across the province will be invited to better define their workforce needs and provide a profile of the ideal worker to bring to Quebec. Professional associations, meanwhile, will be asked to better consider candidates holding diplomas earned abroad.

This is even more important at a time when the search for qualified immigrants is “much more competitive” than in the past, Weil said.

Every year, between 50,000 and 55,000 foreigners move to Quebec, the majority of whom are from Africa. From 2009-2013, one immigrant in five came from Algeria or Morocco.

After the public consultations, Weil will produce a new immigration policy and an action plan. She said she would present a bill in the fall to “modernize” the current law, which she described as “really outdated.”

The new bill will be “the last piece of this large reform,” and an “absolutely fundamental” piece of the puzzle, she added.

Among the provincial government’s challenges will be to specify the importance of immigrants’ knowledge of French prior to their arrival in Quebec and French-language courses.

Upon their arrival, nearly half of all immigrants (43 per cent) do not speak a word of French.

“What can we do to go even further?,” Weil asked, to make French “the cement” and Quebec’s common language. She added that new immigrants must have an “adequate level of French” to find jobs and successfully integrate.

Drawing new immigrants to towns across the province will also be a priority, as three out of four currently settle in the greater Montreal area. Local mayors must play “an increased role” to address this issue, Weil said.

Ultimately, immigration reform needs “the full participation of each and every member of Quebec society,” the minister said.

Source Article from http://ca.news.yahoo.com/quebec-immigration-minister-kathleen-weil-prepares-ottawa-inspired-185914862.html
Quebec Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil prepares for 'Ottawa-inspired' reform
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immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
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Quebec Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil prepares for 'Ottawa-inspired' reform

QUEBEC – Quebec is preparing for a major reform of its immigration policy, with proposed changes partly inspired by Ottawa, says the province’s immigration minister.

The time has come for Quebec to re-examine its immigration model, and the way the province chooses, welcomes and integrates foreigners into the job market, said Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil ahead of year-long public consultations on the issue set to begin Wednesday at the Quebec legislature.

Weil told The Canadian Press she was ready to launch a “big reform” of relations between new immigrants and Quebec society at-large by the end of the year, a process that will include the revision of Quebec’s immigration law.

Everything will be on the table: the number of immigrants welcomed annually, the selection process and favoured countries of origin, the importance of knowing French before arriving, French language courses, the recognition of training undertaken abroad, regionalization, and the sharing of common values.

The minister said she wanted a wide-reaching debate on the issues, and was “very open to everything that will be proposed.”

Fifty stakeholders are expected to participate in public consultation hearings over the next few weeks on the future of immigration to Quebec. The province’s current policy has been in place for 25 years.

A later consultation will also be held on two specific aspects of immigration: the number of immigrants Quebec wants to welcome every year and their countries of origin.

The emphasis, however, will be placed on the economy and balancing between the recruitment of new immigrants and workforce needs. Finding candidates that can fill empty jobs will be key, and on that point, Quebec is being inspired by Ottawa.

Last year, the federal government reformed its selection process for new immigrants. With the focus now primarily on filling jobs, every candidate for immigration to Canada must produce a “declaration of interest” showcasing his or her ability to meet employers’ needs.

Weil said she wanted to appropriate that model. “[What] I want to arrive at, is an immigration system based on the Canadian model,” she said.

In 2013, unemployment among new immigrants to Quebec sat at 11.6 per cent, four percentage points higher than the general population. This was despite the fact that the majority of new immigrants were well educated: 57 per cent completed at least 14 years of schooling.

Employers in each sector across the province will be invited to better define their workforce needs and provide a profile of the ideal worker to bring to Quebec. Professional associations, meanwhile, will be asked to better consider candidates holding diplomas earned abroad.

This is even more important at a time when the search for qualified immigrants is “much more competitive” than in the past, Weil said.

Every year, between 50,000 and 55,000 foreigners move to Quebec, the majority of whom are from Africa. From 2009-2013, one immigrant in five came from Algeria or Morocco.

After the public consultations, Weil will produce a new immigration policy and an action plan. She said she would present a bill in the fall to “modernize” the current law, which she described as “really outdated.”

The new bill will be “the last piece of this large reform,” and an “absolutely fundamental” piece of the puzzle, she added.

Among the provincial government’s challenges will be to specify the importance of immigrants’ knowledge of French prior to their arrival in Quebec and French-language courses.

Upon their arrival, nearly half of all immigrants (43 per cent) do not speak a word of French.

“What can we do to go even further?,” Weil asked, to make French “the cement” and Quebec’s common language. She added that new immigrants must have an “adequate level of French” to find jobs and successfully integrate.

Drawing new immigrants to towns across the province will also be a priority, as three out of four currently settle in the greater Montreal area. Local mayors must play “an increased role” to address this issue, Weil said.

Ultimately, immigration reform needs “the full participation of each and every member of Quebec society,” the minister said.

Source Article from http://ca.news.yahoo.com/quebec-immigration-minister-kathleen-weil-prepares-ottawa-inspired-185914862.html
Quebec Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil prepares for 'Ottawa-inspired' reform
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http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
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Quebec Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil prepares for 'Ottawa-inspired' reform

QUEBEC – Quebec is preparing for a major reform of its immigration policy, with proposed changes partly inspired by Ottawa, says the province’s immigration minister.

The time has come for Quebec to re-examine its immigration model, and the way the province chooses, welcomes and integrates foreigners into the job market, said Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil ahead of year-long public consultations on the issue set to begin Wednesday at the Quebec legislature.

Weil told The Canadian Press she was ready to launch a “big reform” of relations between new immigrants and Quebec society at-large by the end of the year, a process that will include the revision of Quebec’s immigration law.

Everything will be on the table: the number of immigrants welcomed annually, the selection process and favoured countries of origin, the importance of knowing French before arriving, French language courses, the recognition of training undertaken abroad, regionalization, and the sharing of common values.

The minister said she wanted a wide-reaching debate on the issues, and was “very open to everything that will be proposed.”

Fifty stakeholders are expected to participate in public consultation hearings over the next few weeks on the future of immigration to Quebec. The province’s current policy has been in place for 25 years.

A later consultation will also be held on two specific aspects of immigration: the number of immigrants Quebec wants to welcome every year and their countries of origin.

The emphasis, however, will be placed on the economy and balancing between the recruitment of new immigrants and workforce needs. Finding candidates that can fill empty jobs will be key, and on that point, Quebec is being inspired by Ottawa.

Last year, the federal government reformed its selection process for new immigrants. With the focus now primarily on filling jobs, every candidate for immigration to Canada must produce a “declaration of interest” showcasing his or her ability to meet employers’ needs.

Weil said she wanted to appropriate that model. “[What] I want to arrive at, is an immigration system based on the Canadian model,” she said.

In 2013, unemployment among new immigrants to Quebec sat at 11.6 per cent, four percentage points higher than the general population. This was despite the fact that the majority of new immigrants were well educated: 57 per cent completed at least 14 years of schooling.

Employers in each sector across the province will be invited to better define their workforce needs and provide a profile of the ideal worker to bring to Quebec. Professional associations, meanwhile, will be asked to better consider candidates holding diplomas earned abroad.

This is even more important at a time when the search for qualified immigrants is “much more competitive” than in the past, Weil said.

Every year, between 50,000 and 55,000 foreigners move to Quebec, the majority of whom are from Africa. From 2009-2013, one immigrant in five came from Algeria or Morocco.

After the public consultations, Weil will produce a new immigration policy and an action plan. She said she would present a bill in the fall to “modernize” the current law, which she described as “really outdated.”

The new bill will be “the last piece of this large reform,” and an “absolutely fundamental” piece of the puzzle, she added.

Among the provincial government’s challenges will be to specify the importance of immigrants’ knowledge of French prior to their arrival in Quebec and French-language courses.

Upon their arrival, nearly half of all immigrants (43 per cent) do not speak a word of French.

“What can we do to go even further?,” Weil asked, to make French “the cement” and Quebec’s common language. She added that new immigrants must have an “adequate level of French” to find jobs and successfully integrate.

Drawing new immigrants to towns across the province will also be a priority, as three out of four currently settle in the greater Montreal area. Local mayors must play “an increased role” to address this issue, Weil said.

Ultimately, immigration reform needs “the full participation of each and every member of Quebec society,” the minister said.

Source Article from http://ca.news.yahoo.com/quebec-immigration-minister-kathleen-weil-prepares-ottawa-inspired-185914862.html
Quebec Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil prepares for 'Ottawa-inspired' reform
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http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
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The Zombie Immigration Fight


Larry Downing/Reuters

With the debate over immigration in America locked in a stalemate, it would seem neither side has much to fight for. And yet both sides are fighting furiously—in Congress, in the courts, and in the political arena.

The slow death of the legislative process in the House and the Republican takeover of the Senate have killed any hopes for passage of a big reform bill in the foreseeable future—a victory for the proposal’s opponents. On the other hand, President Obama in November used executive action to temporarily protect as many as 5 million undocumented immigrants from the threat of deportation—a major, long-delayed victory for immigrant-rights advocates.

Proponents and opponents of reform have reached the limits of what they can achieve on their own, and are dissatisfied with the status quo, but none of them can change it independently, and they’re not prepared to compromise.

In Iowa this weekend, top Republican presidential contenders assembled at a “Freedom Summit” convened by Representative Steve King, the right-wing congressman who is a high-profile opponent of illegal immigration. You may recall the time he sought to replace the popular image of immigrant children as hardworking strivers with the idea that many have “calves the size of cantaloupes” from “hauling … marijuana across the desert”; last week, King excoriated First Lady Michelle Obama for inviting, as a guest to the State of the Union, “a deportable”—Ana Zamora, a 20-year-old Dallas college student brought to the U.S. as a toddler by her undocumented Mexican parents.

Potential candidates Chris Christie, Ted Cruz, Ben Carson, Mike Huckabee, Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, and Scott Walker all spoke at King’s Iowa gathering; other top contenders, including Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio, Mitt Romney, and Rand Paul, did not attend. The Republicans were met in Iowa by a phalanx of immigration activists and Democratic officials, including the chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, who loudly decried their willingness to kiss the ring of such a divisive figure. King has become notorious in the Hispanic community, but it’s not clear how much clout he will have in the 2016 Iowa caucuses: Though thought to have a following among hard-core conservatives, he made no endorsement in 2012, and in 2008 endorsed the television actor and former senator Fred Thompson, who finished third.

“I hope this is not wishful thinking—I think Steve King is in the process of marginalizing himself, even within his own party,” said Harold Heie, an immigrants’ rights advocate based in Sioux City, whose group sponsored a pro-immigration-reform ad in the Des Moines Register. Failing that, said Erika Andiola, co-director of the DRM Action Coalition, Republicans need to remember what happened in 2012, when Romney’s loss was ascribed in part to his poor showing among Hispanic voters. “It’s very important to get that message to the presidential candidates—to remind them what happened to Mitt Romney and remind them what the Latino community’s really thinking,” she said.

Meanwhile, in Congress, Republicans have vowed not to take Obama’s executive immigration actions lying down. In December, they passed legislation to fund the whole government for the better part of the year—except for the Department of Homeland Security, whose purview includes immigration enforcement, which was funded only until next month. The idea was that this would give the new Republican Congress a chance to impose some sort of restriction on Obama’s immigration policy. But it’s never been clear how they planned to do this. Earlier this month, the House passed a measure seeking to invalidate the executive actions, but it’s not expected to get through the Senate, and Obama has said he would veto it. Republican House and Senate aides have confirmed to me that there was no advance game plan for the DHS gambit; leadership seems to be hoping that the right-wingers will exhaust themselves as they try and figure out something to do, and finally accept that they must suck it up and fund the department or be accused of putting American security at risk. The alternative, a department shutdown, would be bad politics, particularly in light of the recent terrorist attack in France.

Obama’s unilateral liberalization of immigration policy won’t begin to go into effect until the end of next month. Advocacy groups are gearing up for a major enrollment push, for reasons both substantive and symbolic. Though the relief from deportation is only temporary, such an assurance can make a huge difference in the lives of the undocumented, they say, while demonstrating the appetite and enthusiasm for the measure will put pressure on policymakers to go further. Opponents, meanwhile, have pinned their hopes on a lawsuit, brought by 24 states, that challenges the action in federal court. Hearings were held on the suit earlier this month in Brownsville, Texas, before a conservative judge thought to be sympathetic to the states. On Friday, a group of prominent mayors fired back with a court brief siding with the administration. “We believe we have a moral obligation to act—to answer the lawsuit with the voices of the grassroots,” New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said at a Washington press conference with other mayors announcing the brief. He said he was speaking on behalf of “12 million people who are not yet documented but are still our constituents.” The Texas judge is expected to decide soon whether to temporarily halt the deportation-relief measures while the lawsuit proceeds.

The upshot of all this action is a lot of furious argument over a policy in relative stasis. Republicans are expected to control all or part of Congress many years into the future, and their demonstrated unwillingness to reform immigration continues to be a political problem for the party’s national candidates, even as they appear mostly powerless to stop the president from allowing millions of immigrants who came here illegally to live and work openly in the United States. In his State of the Union last week, Obama raised immigration only to say that  he hoped his opponents would leave his policies alone. “We can’t put the security of families at risk by … refighting past battles on immigration when we’ve got a system to fix,” he said, adding that he would veto any bill that sought to do so. Advocates are mostly pleased with what the president has done, though some are still pressuring the White House to do more; at the same time, they have little hope for a permanent solution and are at a loss to regroup and go forward. Still, for the millions of undocumented immigrants, their families, and those who advocate for their interests, giving up isn’t an option, notes Frank Sharry, director of the immigration-reform group America’s Voice. “Some of us are lifers, I’m afraid,” he said.

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The Zombie Immigration Fight
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Huckabee seeks to straddle line on immigration

Washington (CNN)Mike Huckabee says deporting immigrants who were brought into the United States as children is like ticketing a child riding in the back seat of a car when the child’s father is pulled over for speeding.

“You don’t punish a child for something his parents did,” he said during an appearance Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

READ: 2016 race kicks off in Iowa

But, straddling a line that has flummoxed Republicans in recent presidential races, Huckabee still took a shot at President Barack Obama, who in 2012 moved to stop the deportation of those undocumented immigrants, saying Obama, “didn’t have the authority to do it.”

“There’s a process. We have a thing called the Constitution, and the Constitution doesn’t allow the chief executive just to make up law,” he said.

Huckabee’s comments came as he defended state policies that allow undocumented immigrants known as “Dreamers” to qualify for in-state college tuition — and as he explores a run for president.

    The former Arkansas governor, Fox News host and winner of the 2008 Iowa caucuses said he won’t announce a decision on running for the White House until the spring, but added: “I think it’s pretty evident that I’m moving in that direction.”

    He spent Saturday at a conservative summit hosted by Iowa Rep. Steve King, the anti-immigration firebrand, which was attended by several top GOP 2016 hopefuls.

    SEE ALSO: Scott Walker adds key Iowa strategist to 2016 team

    The issue of immigration could be a key one in the GOP’s 2016 nominating process. In the wake of Obama’s 2012 defeat of Republican nominee Mitt Romney, party officials had called for a comprehensive immigration overhaul that could help Republicans appeal to Hispanics.

    Since then, though, the party has shifted to the right, blasting Obama for his handling of border security and saying his executive actions on immigration have spoiled all chances of moving an immigration reform bill through Congress.

Source Article from http://www.cnn.com/2015/01/25/politics/mike-huckabee-obama-immigration/index.html
Huckabee seeks to straddle line on immigration
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immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
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