President Obama delivered an impressive performance
at the immigration town hall at FIU. The president shredded Republicans
for opposing immigration reform while promising to veto any bill that
overturns his immigration executive actions.
The president made it clear that House Republicans
are responsible for blocking immigration reform and promised to veto
Mitch McConnell’s Senate bill to overturn his immigration executive
actions.
The president said:
And for over six years, now, I’ve been calling
on the Republicans to work with us to pass a comprehensive fix that
would strengthen our borders, that would make sure that businesses have
the workforce that they needed, aboveboard, not paying them under the
table, not depriving them of things like overtime or workers’ rights,
and that we provided a pathway for people to earn their way into a legal
status and ultimately citizenship.
And to their credit, members of the Senate
passed a bipartisan bill, overwhelmingly. But the House Republicans
blocked it. They refused to even allow it to get on the floor for a
vote. What I did, then, was to say I’m going to use all of the
authority that I have as the chief executive of the United States, as
well as Commander-in-Chief, to try to make sure that we are prioritizing
our immigration system a lot smarter than we’ve been doing. And what
that means is, is that instead of focusing on families, we’re going to
focus on felons. We’re going to strengthen our borders, which is what
people are concerned about.
….
So in the short term, if Mr. McConnell, the
leader of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House, John Boehner, want
to have a vote on whether what I’m doing is legal or not, they can have
that vote. I will veto that vote, because I’m absolutely confident that
what we’re doing is the right thing to do. And in the meantime, we’re
going to continue to pursue all legal avenues to make sure that we have a
country in which we are respecting not only the law, because we’re a
nation of laws, but we’re also respecting the fact that we’re a nation
of immigrants.
Obama repeatedly reminded viewers that House
Republicans had a chance to pass immigration reform, but they refused to
do it. If Republicans had passed the Senate’s comprehensive immigration
reform bill, the president’s executive actions would not have never
happened.
The idea that Republicans would support immigration
reform, but now won’t because of the president’s executive actions is
completely absurd. The one lesson from the immigration town hall is that
Democrats have a giant advantage with Latino voters because of their
position on immigration. The president is pressing his advantage as
Republicans can’t stop digging themselves deeper into the hole that they
have created by refusing to support comprehensive immigration reform.
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