Administration officials said the president used existing legal
authority to make the broad policy change, which could temporarily
benefit more than 800,000 young people. He did not consult with
Congress, where Republicans have generally opposed measures to benefit
illegal immigrants.
The policy, while not granting any permanent legal status, clears the
way for young illegal immigrants to come out of the shadows, work
legally and obtain driver’s licenses and many other documents they have
lacked.
“They are Americans in their heart, in their minds, in every single way but one: on paper,” President Obama
said in announcing the new policy in the White House Rose Garden on
Friday. He said he was taking “a temporary stopgap measure” that would
“lift the shadow of deportation from these young people” and make immigration policy “more fair, more efficient and more just.”
Under the change, the Department of Homeland Security
will no longer initiate the deportation of illegal immigrants who came
to the United States before age 16, have lived here for at least five
years, and are in school, are high school graduates or are military
veterans in good standing. The immigrants must also be under 30 and have
clean criminal records.
Young people, who have been highly visible and vocal activists despite
their undocumented status, have been calling on Mr. Obama for more than a
year to stop deporting them and allow them to work. Many of them were
elated and relieved on Friday.
“People are just breaking down and crying for joy when they find out
what the president did,” said Lorella Praeli, a leader of the United We
Dream Network, the largest coalition of illegal immigrant students.
Republicans reacted angrily, saying the president had overstepped his
legal bounds to do an end run around Congress. Some Republicans accused
Mr. Obama of violating the law. “The president’s action is an affront to
the process of representative government by circumventing Congress and
with a directive he may not have the authority to execute,” said Senator
Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, the senior Republican on the Senate
Judiciary Committee. “It seems the president has put election-year
politics above responsible policies.”
In many ways, the president’s move was a clear play for a crucial voting
bloc in states that will decide whether he gets another term. It also
held the potential for considerable payoff.
The action was the first measure by Mr. Obama that offers immediate
relief to large numbers of illegal immigrants, in contrast to smaller
steps the administration had taken that were intended to ease the impact
of deportations but in practice had little effect. During the three
years of his term, Mr. Obama has deported more than 1.1 million
immigrants, the most by any president since the 1950s.
“Now let’s be clear: this is not an amnesty,” Mr. Obama said in the Rose
Garden, anticipating the Republican response. “This is not a path to
citizenship. It is not a permanent fix.”
The group of illegal immigrants that will benefit from the policy is
similar to those who would have been eligible to become legal permanent
residents under the Dream Act, legislation that Mr. Obama has long
supported. An effort by the White House to pass the bill in late 2010
was blocked by Republicans in the Senate. Mr. Obama called on Congress
again Friday to pass that legislation.
The president was facing growing pressure from Latino leaders and
Democrats who warned that because of his harsh immigration enforcement,
his support was lagging among Latinos who could be crucial voters in his
race for re-election.
Illegal immigrants said the new policy would make a major difference in
their lives. As students, when they graduate from high school, they
often cannot go on to college because they are not eligible for
financial aid and must pay higher tuition rates. If they do succeed in
graduating from college, regardless of their academic accomplishments,
they cannot be legally employed in the United States or obtain driver’s
or professional licenses.
The Pew Hispanic Center, a nonpartisan research group in Washington,
estimated on Friday that as many as 1.4 million immigrants might be
eligible for the new measure. The vast majority are Latinos, with about
70 percent born in Mexico. Many of the students live in states that
could be pivotal for Mr. Obama’s re-election prospects, including
Colorado, Florida, Nevada and New Mexico.
Nationally, a Pew Center survey in December found that 91 percent of Latinos supported the Dream Act.
For immigrants who come forward and qualify, Homeland Security
authorities will use prosecutorial discretion to grant deferred action, a
reprieve that will be valid for two years and will have to be renewed.
Under current law, that status allows immigrants to apply for work
permits.
In a memorandum issued Friday referring to the students, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano
instructed all enforcement agents to “immediately exercise their
discretion, on an individual basis, in order to prevent low-priority
individuals from being placed into removal proceedings.”
But Homeland Security officials said they would begin accepting requests
from immigrant students in 60 days, leaving time to prepare procedures
to handle the huge response they expect.
Representative Steve King, Republican of Iowa, who is an outspoken
critic of illegal immigrants, said he would bring a lawsuit against the
White House to stop the measure.
White House officials said they chose Friday for the policy shift
because it is the 30th anniversary of a Supreme Court decision, Plyler
v. Doe, that effectively established that all children, regardless of
immigration status, were entitled to public education through high
school.
Immigrant student leaders praised Mr. Obama, saying his action should
convince other students that advocacy could be effective, even for
immigrants without legal status. Although the reprieve is temporary, the
leaders said they expected that the majority of students would seize
the opportunity to work and come out into the open.
“We’ve done away with the fear,” said Gaby Pacheco, 27, an
Ecuadorean-born immigrant who was among the first in a wave of students
in recent years who “came out” to declare publicly that they were in
this country illegally.
Mr. Obama also received praise from Democratic lawmakers, including the
Hispanic Caucus in the House and Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the
second-highest Democrat in the Senate who is the leading author of the
Dream Act. Mr. Durbin first proposed in April 2010 that the president
should grant deferred action to young students.
Over the past two months Mr. Durbin and other top Democrats, including
Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, have quietly urged
Mr. Obama to do something significant to help immigrant students.
Maricela Aguilar, 21, who was born in Mexico and lives in Wisconsin,
said she was in Los Angeles with a group of students when the news came
of the new policy.
“We were all watching and listening and screaming out in joy,” she said.
Ms. Aguilar graduated last month from Marquette University, but feared
she would never find work professionally.
Some students were cautious, recalling that Mr. Obama had promised them
help before. “We don’t want to get too excited,” said Daniela Alulema,
25, an illegal immigrant from Ecuador who is a leader of the New York
State Youth Leadership Council. “We hope that what was announced will be
implemented and will actually help our community.”
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