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The Daily Signal
Here’s How
Conservatives Aim to Stop Obama’s Action on Illegal Immigrants
Josh Siegel
November 07, 2014
President Obama at his Nov. 5 press conference on the results of the
midterm elections. (Photo: Christy Bowe/Polaris)
Aides to conservative members of the U.S. Senate say their bosses are
rallying around a strategy to prevent President Obama from taking
executive action to move illegal immigrants toward citizenship: Use
government funding bills to withhold the money the president needs to
implement his plan.
At the same time, some of the Senate’s most conservative members are
worried that party leadership could try to strike a deal with Democrats
in the lame duck session on a longer-term spending agreement that could
limit lawmakers’ ability to defund whatever Obama decides to do.
In a series of interviews with The Daily Signal, conservative Senate
staffers said their lawmakers firmly oppose Obama’s acting on his own
to allow millions of illegal immigrants to stay in the country.
However, they are open to supporting a piecemeal approach on
immigration policy that would emphasize border security first.
The results of this week’s election — where Republicans took control of
the Senate and picked up seats in the House with a platform opposed to
unilateral immigration action by the president — only emboldened their
will to fight it, the Senate staffers said.
This election is validation for that. Voters don’t support amnesty and
expanding DACA. It’s one of the only issues that is at the cross
section of the economy and national security. We should not run from
it. We should embrace it.
DACA, or Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, is the Obama
administration program delaying deportation of illegal immigrants who
were brought to America as children.
In a letter Wednesday to outgoing Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid,
D-Nev., six Senate conservatives vowed to “use all procedural means
necessary” to fight Obama’s executive action.
“This will create a constitutional crisis that demands action by
Congress to restore the separation of powers,” wrote Sens. Ted Cruz,
R-Texas; Mike Crapo, R-Idaho; Mike Lee, R-Utah; Pat Roberts, R-Kansas;
Jeff Sessions, R-Ala.; and David Vitter, R-La.
Purse Power
Although GOP leadership in the House and Senate have spoken firmly
against Obama’s plan to overhaul the immigration system — which the
president confirmed Wednesday would come before the end of the year —
conservatives question whether leadership’s words will be backed by
action.
In a press conference yesterday in Washington, House Speaker John
Boehner offered a stark warning that Obama not act alone.
“When you play with matches you take the risk of burning yourself and
[Obama] is going to burn himself if he continues down this path,”
Boehner said.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, all but certain to
become majority leader in January, supplied his own analogy regarding
unilateral action by Obama.
“It’s like waving a red flag in front of a bull,” he told reporters in
Louisville the day after his re-election in the Republican wave.
In an interview with Time magazine, McConnell said he supported
conservatives’ strategy to “push back on executive overreach through
the funding process.”
But conservatives worry that an impatient public, tired of
congressional gridlock, may push party leaders to strike conciliatory
deals in an effort to show Republicans can govern.
One point of contention: how to approach the “lame duck” period
before the new Congress begins work in January.
A stopgap spending measure to fund the government expires Dec. 11, and
Democrats and some Republicans want to end the pattern of short-term,
fiscal-cliff budgeting that has defined the past few years.
Last month, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy told Politico that he
would like to use the lame duck session to pass a long-term
government-funding bill.
Conservatives privately criticized the California Republican’s comment.
“That would be very unhelpful,” a second GOP Senate aide said. “You are
giving up all leverage to stop the administrative actions that you
disagree with.”
The Daily Signal agreed not to identify the aides to senators so that
they could speak bluntly about their bosses’ concerns.
The White House may wait until after a spending bill clears Congress to
announce changes in immigration policy. That’s why conservatives
believe that agreeing to a long-term funding measure — one that lasts
until Oct. 1 of next year — would lock into place funding for Obama’s
program.
“I don’t think he will do this right after the election,” a third
Senate aide said of Obama:
Because he knows we will make it an issue in the lame duck, and we have
the momentum. There’s no reason to pass a long-term bill with a bunch
of senators who won’t be there [after January].
Conservatives prefer short-term funding, probably through February, so
they can come back to the spending fight early next year. Then, in full
control of the process, they could begin withholding funding the
president would need to implement immigration changes made
without Congress.
So, for example, when an appropriations bill for an individual agency
such as the Department of Homeland Security goes through Congress,
lawmakers would provide no funds for an activity such as issuance of a
specific number of work permits.
“I would be shocked if there’s anything but a short-term [bill], a
fourth conservative Senate staffer said. “We can be very precise with
it [in deciding what and how to defund immigration-related activities].
Ultimately, I don’t think McConnell will endorse a moderate view on
immigration.”
Another Option
As part of an emergency spending package to address the border crisis
this summer, the House passed a bill offered by Rep. Marsha Blackburn,
R-Tenn., that said the president cannot renew or expand DACA. It
effectively ended the program.
If tying the immigration issue to a must-pass spending bill becomes too
politically charged, conservatives could try to pass standalone
legislation such as Blackburn’s — or something similar.
Although Obama never would sign such a bill, the conservative Senate
staffers argue that it’s important to force Democrats to weigh in on
immigration.
“Knowing that next year the president will have no political
limitations and we won’t be able to stop him, we have to make it as
painful as possible for Democrats to vote for it,” the first Senate
aide said.
We will push very hard to make sure we get a number of opportunities to
put Democrats on the record about every aspect of this issue — from the
substance of what he does to the funding for it. The metric is not to
force the president to do something. We want people to know who
supports amnesty and who doesn’t.
‘Hope Springs Eternal’
Instead of stopping Obama’s unilateral action on immigration policy,
Republicans could bring forward their own ideas.
Obama said Wednesday that he still wants Congress to pass comprehensive
legislation to reform the immigration system. He promised that if
Congress passes a bill, it would make executive actions “go away.”
Congress has had chances to do so.
More than a year ago, the Democratic-led Senate passed a comprehensive
bill to clear the way for millions of illegal immigrants to move toward
citizenship.
The House leadership refused to move that bill or a similar one to a
vote, with many members calling it amnesty.
Mitt Romney, the party’s 2012 presidential nominee, recently has
speculated openly that a Republican-controlled Senate would mean
passage of a conservative immigration reform bill.
Boehner seemed to stagger on the issue during yesterday’s press
conference.
The House speaker first said that if Obama acts on his own, he will
“poison the well” and “there will be no chance of immigration reform
moving in this Congress.”
Later, however, he said: “It is time for Congress to take care of a
very difficult issue in our society.”
“It is just time to deal with it,” Boehner said, ending his
comments on immigration by telling reporters, “Hope springs eternal.”
If a vote were taken today, the conservative Senate aides doubt
comprehensive legislation could pass either chamber. They point to the
volatility of the border crisis during the summer, when thousands of
unaccompanied children from Central America illegally entered the
country.
“The Senate passed something. The House didn’t want it,” the fourth
Senate aide said. “Congress has spoken on comprehensive immigration
reform.”
Still, lawmakers may try to complete smaller-scale bills that would
address issues in the immigration system individually, as House members
proceeded to do last year.
“There are still some issues with guest worker visas,” the third Senate
aide said. “You’ll see a lot more stronger enforcement measures and
less pathway to citizenship.”
But ultimately, for lawmakers who feel slighted by what they view as
excessive use of independent presidential authority, the preferred
action might be to just say no.
“The whole message of the next Congress will be restoration of
congressional power,” the fourth staffer said.
Read the article with links and photos at The Daily Signal
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