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politics and politicians Title: Executive order on immigration would ignite a political firestorm Reports are rampant that President Obama will sign an executive order as soon as this week that will allow up to 5 million undocumented immigrants to avoid deportation. Signing such an order would have explosive political consequences it would not only reshape the near-term fights in Congress but also have a potentially profound effect on the two parties national coalitions heading into the 2016 election and beyond. Republicans have made it clear that if Obama goes forward, it would be the equivalent of giving the middle finger to their incoming majority and, by extension, the American public, which helped the GOP gain seats in the House and Senate on Nov. 4. At a news conference held the day after the midterm elections, Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), the incoming Senate majority leader, compared Obamas signing of an executive order on immigration to waving a red flag in front of a bull. Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) said Obama will burn himself if he moves forward. You get the idea. Republicans aint happy and they are likely to get a lot less happy over the next week or so. No matter what congressional response McConnell and Boehner craft and they are undoubtedly looking at their options the most obvious and predictable outcome of Obamas expected move on immigration is that any hope of bipartisanship on much of anything in the 114th Congress, set to convene in January, would probably be out of the question. Obama knows that. And it would seem he doesnt care. Or rather, he has made the calculation that the chances of genuine bipartisanship on virtually anything was so low in the first place that it didnt make sense not to do what he believes is the right thing. The post-grand-bargain-collapse version of Obama is far less willing to extend his hand to Republicans having, in his estimation, had it bitten so many times before. He views the now the well is poisoned point being made by Republicans as laughable. Then there is the political calculus Obama is making as it relates to his own party. His decision to postpone the signing of the executive order until after the 2014 elections was a clear bow to Democratic senators seeking reelection in Republican (or at least Republican-leaning) states, who fretted that such a move would doom their chances. Turns out, they were doomed anyway. With Sens. Mark Pryor (Ark.), Mark Udall (Colo.) and Mark Begich (Alaska) all having lost and Sen. Mary Landrieu (La.) headed in that direction Obama is done waiting around. (And, yes, the fact that none of those people wanted him to campaign for them in the fall miffed him.) With a Republican Party with which he believes he cannot deal in any meaningful way and a timid congressional Democratic Party (in his estimation), Obamas decision is a simple one: This is good policy and, in the long term maybe in the short term, too good politics. For Obama, signing an executive order such as this one in addition to his move on DREAMers during the 2012 campaign would cement him as the first president who succeeded in bringing the millions of people living in the shadows into the light. For someone who, rightly, sees the possibility of major legislative action on any of his priorities in the final two years of his presidency as a pipe dream, making such a move on immigration is his best/only way to build out a pillar of his second-term legacy. This decision, given the Republicans strongly stated opposition to it, would also be a bit of an act of purposeful provocation on his part. And, many Democratic strategists hope/believe that conservatives in the House and Senate would react vociferously to it and, in so doing, damage the already-not-so-great Republican brand among Hispanics (and voters more generally). Democrats and Obama in particular remain convinced that the 2014 elections proved nothing about how the country feels about Republicans, and that by exposing some of the elements within the Republican Party that its leaders have worked to keep quiet in recent months, they can regain the political momentum lost this month. Longer term, the hope in Obama world is that an executive order would further cement the Democratic Party as the exclusive (or close to it) home for Hispanic voters. (An aggressive response to the Obama executive order by Republicans particularly if it veers from talking about Obama to talking about the Latino community in a negative way could well help that process along, too.) Democratic House candidates won the Hispanic vote 62 percent to 38 percent in 2014, according to national exit polls. Thats a considerable improvement for Republicans from the 29 percent of the Latino vote that Mitt Romney got in 2012. There is real long-term political danger here for Republicans. Remember that in the wake of Romneys defeat, the Republican National Committee commissioned an autopsy to diagnose what went wrong and what it needed to do to fix it. One of the central conclusions of that document was that Republicans had to be for some sort of comprehensive immigration reform to take that issue off the table for Hispanics and allow the GOP to talk to that community about other things. Heres the relevant section of that report: We are not a policy committee, but among the steps Republicans take in the Hispanic community and beyond, we must embrace and champion comprehensive immigration reform. If we do not, our Partys appeal will continue to shrink to its core constituencies only. We also believe that comprehensive immigration reform is consistent with Republican economic policies that promote job growth and opportunity for all. Obama is moving a major chess piece on the board with his planned executive order. Republicans must be careful with their countermove. It will have implications that last well beyond 2014 or even 2016. If Boehner and McConnell aren't willing to take on this juvenile amateur then I guess we should just give up the ghost and wait for left wing Armageddon.
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#1. To: IbJensen (#0)
I see an opportunity for the republicans ! The blacks are over identified with the liberals ... that doesn't go over big --- in the Hispanic community ! Look what happened in the 2000 elections in Miami Florida ... how it blackfired --- on gore's election ! Cubans coming to America ... getting lynched - railroaded --- by the dnc - naaclp !
If you ... don't use exclamation points --- you should't be typeing ! Commas - semicolons - question marks are for girlie boys !
Obama will grant amnesty. The Supreme Court will not stop him. Amnesty will be granted, and Congress will not do anything to block it during the lame duck, because the Democrats still control the Senate. Come January, the Republicans will take over the Senate, but amnesty will be a fait accompli. At that point the Republicans will not the ability to do anything. They can't pass a law against what Obama has done: the Democrats will filibuster it, and Obama will veto. The only remaining tool would be government shutdown. Obama will accept a shutdown, and the media will beat on the Republicans endlessly over it. Eventually, the Republicans will cave. Eventually, the country will come up against default, and the Republicans will not permit that - and will have to capitulate to Obama on amnesty in order to prevent it. Now, of course, if there were people out there who were willing to wipe out the nation's credit - and the rich Alphas - and accept a default, economic disaster, a new Great Depression and the mass destruction of wealth and jobs as the chemotherapy necessary to rip up the cancer of Amnesty, Obamacare and the military empire, well, then things could change. But until there are enough people willing to pay the price to get out from under what we're under, Obama and the Democrats will continue to win. They have all of the trump cards, they have the will, and they know they're winning.
Right again!
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