Obama heckled by reporter in Rose Garden

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rockin'robin

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as he explains new immigration plan


President Obama explained his administration's decision to allow as many as 800,000 young illegal immigrants to apply for temporary legal status and work permits in a speech this afternoon in the Rose Garden.

The president was interrupted by reporter Neil Munroe twice, who asked him to defend his assertion that the move is the "right thing" for the country. Obama talked over the reporter but later in the speech addressed him, again asserting that the immigration decision is the right one. Munroe again interrupted Obama. "I didn't ask for an argument," the president said sharply, ending the unusual exchange.

"They are Americans in their hearts, in their minds, in every single way but one--on paper," Obama said of the young illegal immigrants who will be affected by his plan. The sweeping proposal allows immigrants without criminal records who are under 30 years old, entered the country as children, have graduated from a U.S. high school, and can prove they've lived in the country for five consecutive years to apply for temporary legal status and then two-year, renewable work permits. It does not provide them a path to citizenship. In his speech, Obama stressed that the move is "not amnesty," and that he thinks Congress should still pass a broader legalization bill.

The move could have big political implications. President Obama has faced criticism from the crucial Hispanic electorate for ramping up deportations under his tenure and for failing to deliver on his campaign promise to pass comprehensive immigration reform. Advocates and advisers worried that even though Obama enjoyed a big lead over Romney among Latino voters, a lack of enthusiasm could keep many of them home on Election Day in key swing states like Nevada, Colorado, and Florida. This announcement is likely to generate enthusiasm among many Latinos: 87 percent of registered Latino voters said in a Latino Decisions poll that they support legalizing young immigrants.

Young people who were brought into the country illegally or overstayed their visas as children are commonly referred to as "Dreamers," referencing the title of a decade-old bill that would have given them a path to citizenship if they joined the military or attended college. The Dream Act passed the House nearly two years ago, but was blocked by Republicans in the Senate. Opponents of the bill have argued that it would encourage more people to enter the country illegally, while supporters say it helps people who were brought up as Americans and whose lack of status is not their own fault become full members of society.

During the primary, Mitt Romney said he would veto the Dream Act, but in recent weeks he has seemed open to a proposal by Sen. Marco Rubio to grant Dreamers work permits but not a path to citizenship.

Romney adviser Kevin Madden said on MSNBC that the move is "political" and that Romney will stay focused on the economy. It's telling that the Romney team--eager not to alienate Latino voters--isn't attacking Obama on the substance of the move, but only the process and motivations of it.

Many Congressional Republicans are also criticizing the move as an executive overreach. "This decision avoids dealing with Congress and the American people instead of fixing a broken immigration system once and for all," wrote Sen. Lindsay Graham, one of the few Congressional Republicans who supports immigration reform. "President Obama's decision to grant amnesty to potentially millions of illegal immigrants is a breach of faith with the American people," Rep. Lamar Smith, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and a vocal illegal immigration opponent, said.

In the past, Obama has said he doesn't have the power to stop the deportation of Dreamers. "There are enough laws on the books by Congress that are very clear in terms of how we have to enforce our immigration system that for me to simply, through executive order, ignore those congressional mandates would not conform with my appropriate role as President," Obama told one Dreamer who asked him why he couldn't halt young people's deportations in March of 2011.

Obama heckled by reporter in Rose Garden as he explains new immigration plan | The Ticket - Yahoo! News
 
Obama is doing this because it is "the best thing", the best thing to help him get re-elected. That is all he cares about. He has no intention of doing the best thing for America.
 
I love this line...

They are Americans in their hearts, in their minds, in every single way but one--on paper

Yeah, I am a billionaire like that
 
Obama is doing this because it is "the best thing", the best thing to help him get re-elected. That is all he cares about. He has no intention of doing the best thing for America.

In bold, I disagree with you.

Obama has done best thing for me.
 
So, Obama care about illegal immigrants while richer is happy to save their cents to pay low crap wage? Win-win?
 
Look at it this way. There are legal procedures for a person to come into America, and they must be followed in order to be fair to all. All Obama has done is build a new back door. He is tell all: "Why waste your time coming in the legal way!"
 
Look at it this way. There are legal procedures for a person to come into America, and they must be followed in order to be fair to all. All Obama has done is build a new back door. He is tell all: "Why waste your time coming in the legal way!"

He most likely broke the law too....But that is nothing new for him.
 
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