Associated
Press writers Eric Tucker in Washington and
Juan Lozano in Houston
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Obama administration put its new deportation-relief program on hold Tuesday on the eve of its launch, complying reluctantly with a federal judge's order that roiled immigrant communities nationwide and seemed to harden an already-tense stalemate on Capitol Hill.
President
Barack Obama promised an appeal and predicted he'd prevail. But for tens of
thousands of immigrants in line to begin applying Wednesday for work permits
and deportation stays under his directives, their plans were canceled, at least
temporarily.
Talking to
reporters in the Oval Office, Obama said he disagreed with the ruling by U.S.
District Judge Andrew Hanen of Texas
that the administration had exceeded its authority. But he said that, for now,
he must abide by it.
"We're not
going to disregard this federal court ruling," Obama said, but he added
that administration officials would continue to prepare to roll out the
program. "I think the law is on our side and history is on our side,"
he said.
On Capitol
Hill, the Homeland Security Department stood 10 days away from losing funding,
but Hanen's ruling made a compromise on that dispute look more distant than
ever. Republicans are blocking funding for the agency unless Democrats agree to
cancel Obama's immigration orders, and they seized on the ruling as validation
for their position.
"Congress
must reassert its waning power. We must re-establish the constitutional
principle that the people's representatives control the purse," said Sen.
Jeff Sessions of Alabama,
a leading immigration hardliner.
Yet Senate
Democrats, who have been blocking a House-passed bill that would fund the
department but also undo Obama's actions, said the ruling from Hanen did nothing
to budge them.
"Democrats
remain united in our belief that funding for the Department of Homeland
Security should not be used as a ransom by Republicans, period," said
Chuck Schumer of New York.
The agency's
$40 billion budget runs out Feb. 27, and with Congress now on recess lawmakers
will have only a few days to reach an agreement once they return to Washington next week.
One possibility is a short-term extension of current funding levels, but House
Speaker John Boehner said over the weekend that the House had done its job and
he would "certainly" let a shutdown occur if the Senate didn't act.
If the
political impasse seemed severe, so were the implications for millions of
immigrants in the country illegally who have cheered Obama's executive directives
in the face of congressional inaction.
"We feel
powerless but not defeated, sure that it will all work out," 46-year-old
Claudia Ramon, a native of Colombia,
said at a rally in Houston, one of dozens nationwide where immigrants and their
advocates vowed to continue with preparations under Obama's programs.
Obama's
directives would make more than 4 million immigrants in the United States
illegally eligible for three-year deportation stays and work permits. Mostly
those are people who have been in the country for more than five years and have
children who are U.S.
citizens or legal permanent residents. Applications for the first phase were to
begin Wednesday, when as many as 300,000 immigrants brought illegally to the
country as children could begin applying for an expansion of Obama's 2012
program aimed at the younger immigrants known as Dreamers.
Yet there was
also palpable anxiety, with their apparent White House gains under attack on
Capitol Hill and in the courts. Advocates pledged to redouble their efforts to
sign up as many people as possible.
"It's
extremely important for the community to understand from a legal perspective it
is on solid legal footing and actually the larger numbers of people who come
forward to apply, the more likely we can protect the expansion," said
Marielena Hincapie, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center.
Hanen's ruling
late Monday night, in a case brought by 26 states led by Texas, said that Obama and his Homeland
Security Department lacked the authority to take the actions they did.
"No
statute gives the DHS the discretion it is trying to exercise here," wrote
Hanen, and he issued a stay blocking the actions from taking effect. His order
was not a big surprise from a Republican-appointed judge who has showed a hard
line on border issues.
The Obama administration
could seek a stay of his order in addition to appealing to the 5th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in New Orleans.
Attorney General Eric Holder said Tuesday that the Justice Department was
deciding its next move.
He said,
"I've always expected that this is a matter that will ultimately be
decided by a higher court - if not the Supreme Court then a federal court of
appeals."
The drama
played out with the 2016 presidential contest getting underway and candidates
of both parties eager to win over Latino voters. One potential Republican
candidate, Jeb Bush, weighed in with a post to his Facebook page declaring that
Obama had overstepped his authority and "hurt the effort toward a
common-sense immigration solution."
"Now, more
than ever, we need President Obama to work with Congress to secure the border
and fix our broken immigration system," Bush wrote.
Comment:
The beat goes
on. Where do we go from here? It seems that all parties agree that immigration
reform is a necessary move that must be made sooner rather than later. Would it
not be to the advantage of all of them to knock off the partisan nonsense and
sit down and resolve the problem? That is what they were all elected to do and
it is high time that they did it instead of shooting arrows across the aisle at
each other.
Jack Meehan,
National President Emeritus
Ancient Order
of Hibernians in America
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