Author Topic: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You  (Read 65294 times)

JOHN MATRIX

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #125 on: January 14, 2015, 12:03:53 PM »
Luis Gutierrez (D-Illinois) is probably the biggest, most open traitor in congress today.

the main focus of his career as a United States congressman is to work tirelessly on behalf of foreign nationals while undermining actual american citizens. i mean that is literally what he does. is this not treason??

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #126 on: January 14, 2015, 12:08:37 PM »
the house gave obama 1.1 trillion for 9 months.

They'll NEVER be accused of having balls, no worries there.

Dos Equis

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #127 on: January 14, 2015, 12:18:15 PM »
Luis Gutierrez (D-Illinois) is probably the biggest, most open traitor in congress today.

the main focus of his career as a United States congressman is to work tirelessly on behalf of foreign nationals while undermining actual american citizens. i mean that is literally what he does. is this not treason??

There really is a disconnect with some of these people.  No legislator should be advocating for amnesty. 

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #128 on: January 14, 2015, 02:40:28 PM »
There really is a disconnect with some of these people.  No legislator should be advocating for amnesty. 

MITT ROMNEY: REPUBLICANS SHOULD ‘SWALLOW HARD,’ PASS ‘PERMANENT’ AMNESTY BILL

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2014/11/26/mitt-romney-republicans-should-swallow-hard-pass-permanent-amnesty-bill/

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #129 on: January 14, 2015, 02:43:54 PM »

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #130 on: January 14, 2015, 10:17:30 PM »
see, you attack me instead of saying "wow, I sure wish romney wasn't kneepadding amnesty".

I'm not running for president in 2016, beach bum.  Sorry, but it's just not something I want to do.  Romney, on the other hand, it's crossed his mind actually.  So while my kneepadding on any issue is irrelevant, romney's opinion on the matter (left of obama, currently)  could result in 5 or 10 million new liberal residents of USA.

Maybe you're cool with that.  But I'm not.   

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #131 on: January 16, 2015, 10:50:00 AM »
Five Shocking “Free” Things Illegals Get Under Obama That You Don’t…
Posted on January 14, 2015 in Columns

1.  Free food!  The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), otherwise known as “food stamps” is widely utilized by the illegal immigrant community.



2.  Free education! American taxpayers are footing the bill for educating every illegal immigrant under 18 years old who chooses to attend a public school.



3.  Free housing! $50 million worth of free housing, that is, courtesy President Barack Obama.



4.  Free healthcare!  Yes, thousands of illegal immigrants are currently enrolled in Obamacare, and are receiving taxpayer funded benefits.



5.  Free legal services! States from New York to California and many in between provide free legal services to illegals. If President Obama has his way, free legal services will soon be available for all illegal immigrants.



http://louderwithcrowder.com/five-incredible-free-things-illegals-get-obama-dont/#

JOHN MATRIX

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #132 on: January 16, 2015, 11:21:21 AM »
disgusting

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #133 on: February 09, 2015, 01:10:04 PM »
DHS Sets Up Complaint Hotline for Illegal Immigrants
Feb 09, 2015
As seen on Fox and Friends

The Department of Homeland Security has set up a hotline for illegal immigrants to call and complain if they feel their rights under President Obama's amnesty program are being violated.

The president's amnesty policy prevents the deportation of up to 4 million illegal immigrants and orders Border Patrol agents and Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents not to arrest other people who are in the country illegally who don’t meet the criteria for full amnesty.

A memo from U.S. Customs and Border Protection says, "If you believe you (or a family member) were apprehended and processed by a Customs and Border Protection officer or Border Patrol agent contrary to the new DHS enforcement priorities, please tell us about your experience by contacting the CBP INFO Center."

The National Border Control Council said that this is a "slap in the face" to those who risk their lives to enforce the laws. They explained this new hotline invites illegal immigrants to ridicule agents when the government should be offering those agents support.

Watch the clip above.

http://insider.foxnews.com/2015/02/09/department-homeland-security-sets-complaint-hotline-illegal-immigrants

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #134 on: February 17, 2015, 11:35:43 AM »
Good decision.

Obama immigration order temporarily halted by Texas judge
By Jethro Mullen and Jeremy Diamond, CNN
February 17, 2015

(CNN)A federal judge in Texas has temporarily blocked President Barack Obama's executive action on immigration, which has drawn opposition from 26 states across the nation.

United States District Judge Andrew Hanen ruled late Monday night to block executive actions Obama took late last year to shield as many as 5 million undocumented immigrants from deportation. In delaying the ruling, Hanen halted Obama's executive action, ruling that the administration had failed to comply with the Administrative Procedure Act, which calls for the White House to afford a longer notification and comment period before taking action.

The White House said in a statement early Tuesday that Obama's actions "are well within his legal authority" and that the Justice Department has indicated "that it will appeal that decision."

"The district court's decision wrongly prevents these lawful, commonsense policies from taking effect," the White House said in a statement. "The Supreme Court and Congress have made clear that the federal government can set priorities in enforcing our immigration laws — which is exactly what the President did when he announced commonsense policies to help fix our broken immigration system."

Attorney General Eric Holder called the ruling just an "interim step" in a legal process that will take some time to play out.

"This is a decision by one federal district court judge," Holder said Tuesday at the National Press Club, adding that the Justice Department is reviewing the ruling to determine the next step.

Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson, whose department would be responsible for implementing the executive orders, said he "strongly" disagrees with the judge's decision.

Johnson said his department would comply with the injunction while the appeals process plays out and his department will not launch the DACA expansion on Wednesday, as previously scheduled.

"We fully expect to ultimately prevail in the courts, and we will be prepared to implement DAPA and expanded DACA once we do," Johnson said.

Obama's decision to act unilaterally in November drew the ire of Republicans who immediately slammed the President's actions as unconstitutional and conservatives have now been waging a battle in Congress to tie funding for the Department of Homeland Security to killing Obama's immigration orders.

The programs at issue are deferred action programs for undocumented parents of Americans and lawful residents and expansions to the program protecting illegal immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as children -- known as DAPA and DACA, respectively. Neither program had gone into effect.

Hanen issued the injunction after concluding that at least Texas has standing in federal court to pursue its lawsuit as Texas "stands to suffer direct damages from the implementation of DAPA."

He also argues that Obama's executive action goes beyond the scope of prosecutorial discretion by "bestowing benefits," which is more than "non-enforcement."

"The Court seriously doubts that the Supreme Court, in holding non-enforcement decisions to be presumptively unreviewable, anticipated that such "non-enforcement" decisions would include the affirmative act of bestowing multiple, otherwise unobtainable benefits upon an individual," Hanen wrote.

Hanen's decision Monday came after Texas led 25 other states in a federal lawsuit to stop the executive action, and officials swiftly welcomed the judge's decision.

"This decision is a victory for the rule of law in America and a crucial first step in reining in President Obama's lawlessness," Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement.

And Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who has championed efforts in Congress to undo Obama's executive action, welcomed the news on Twitter, calling the decision a "HUGE victory for rule of law."

Texas's senior Sen. John Cornyn, also a Republican, said in a statement Tuesday that the ruling "reinforces" what he and other opponents have claimed, "that President Obama acted outside the law."

"Today's victory is an important one, but the fight to reverse the President's unconstitutional overreach is not over," Cornyn said. "The President must respect the rule of law and fully obey the court's ruling."

But the Obama administration and supporters of the immigration orders were quick to counter conservative glee. Obama and his staff have long argued that the President has the legal right to take action, saying he only acted because Congress failed to pass immigration reform.

Immigration activists were quick to characterize the court injunction as a just "a bump in the road."

"We've hit a speed bump on the road to the implementation of these programs, but folks should stay the course, get their documents ready, prepare to apply, because the programs will open their doors eventually," said Karen Tumlin, Managing Attorney of the National Immigration Law Center.

Cristina Jimenez, managing director of United We Dream, insisted that the federal ruling would not stand and said Hanen, a conservative appointed by President George W. Bush,"has become known as an advocate for the harsh treatment of immigrant families."

"Executive action protecting immigrant youth and parents is solid," Jimenez said in a statement. "Judge Hanen's ruling is not permanent and we are confident that it will be repealed in a higher court."

The Texas-led coalition of states in the legal challenge are Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

http://www.cnn.com/2015/02/17/politics/texas-obama-immigration-injunction/index.html

Dos Equis

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #135 on: February 18, 2015, 10:05:56 AM »
Ted Cruz: White House ‘Counterfeiting Immigration Documents’
February 18, 2015

Sen. Ted Cruz speaks to guests at the Iowa Freedom Summit on Jan. 24, 2015 in Des Moines, Iowa. (credit: Scott Olson/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (CBSDC/AP) — Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, believes that the Obama administration is “counterfeiting immigration documents” under the president’s immigration plan.

Speaking to Fox News following a federal judge’s decision to temporarily halt President Barack Obama’s executive action on immigration, the potential Republican presidential contender said the commander in chief is ignoring federal law.

“One of the things it points out is the president has claimed, rather absurdly, that the basis of his authority is ‘prosecutorial discretion.’ That he’s simply choosing not to prosecute 4.5 million people here illegally,” Cruz told Fox News. “But what the district court concluded, quite rightly, is they’re doing far more than that. The administration is printing work authorizations. It is affirmatively acting in contravention of federal law. Basically, what its doing is counterfeiting immigration documents, because the work authorizations its printing are directly contrary to the text of federal law. It is dangerous when the president ignores federal law.”

U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen’s decision late Monday puts on hold Obama’s orders that could spare from deportation as many as 5 million people who are in the U.S. illegally.

In a memorandum accompanying his order, Hanen said the lawsuit should go forward and that the states would “suffer irreparable harm in this case” without a preliminary injunction.

“The genie would be impossible to put back into the bottle,” he wrote, adding that he agreed that legalizing the presence of millions of people is a “virtually irreversible” action.

Talking to reporters in the Oval Office, Obama said he disagreed with the ruling by Hanen that the administration had exceeded its authority. But he said that, for now, he must abide by it.

“We’re not going to disregard this federal court ruling,” Obama said, but he added that administration officials would continue to prepare to roll out the program. “I think the law is on our side and history is on our side,” he said.

Cruz called it a “major victory for the rule of law.”

“It’s interesting, (Obama) said the law is on his side. There’s at least one person who calls himself a legal scholar who disagrees, and his name is Barack Obama,” Cruz said. “Twenty-two times President Obama has admitted he doesn’t have the authority to issue unilateral amnesty. Twenty-two times he says the constitution doesn’t allow it. He said, ‘This is not a monarchy.’ That’s his quote. And then after the last election, he said never mind and issued it anyway.”
Obama’s directives would make more than 4 million immigrants in the United States illegally eligible for three-year deportation stays and work permits. Mostly those are people who have been in the country for more than five years and have children who are U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents. Applications for the first phase were to begin Wednesday, when as many as 300,000 immigrants brought illegally to the country as children could begin applying for an expansion of Obama’s 2012 program aimed at the younger immigrants known as Dreamers.

Hanen’s ruling late Monday night, in a case brought by 26 states led by Texas, said that Obama and his Homeland Security Department lacked the authority to take the actions they did.

“No statute gives the DHS the discretion it is trying to exercise here,” wrote Hanen, and he issued a stay blocking the actions from taking effect. His order was not a big surprise from a Republican-appointed judge who has showed a hard line on border issues.

The Obama administration could seek a stay of his order in addition to appealing to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. Attorney General Eric Holder said Tuesday that the Justice Department was deciding its next move.

He said, “I’ve always expected that this is a matter that will ultimately be decided by a higher court — if not the Supreme Court then a federal court of appeals.”

http://washington.cbslocal.com/2015/02/18/ted-cruz-white-house-counterfeiting-immigration-documents/

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #136 on: February 18, 2015, 10:07:12 AM »
 :)

Texas judge's immigration rebuke may be hard to challenge
BY DAVID INGRAM AND MICA ROSENBERG
NEW YORK Wed Feb 18, 2015

(Reuters) - President Barack Obama's administration faces a difficult and possibly lengthy legal battle to overturn a Texas court ruling that blocked his landmark immigration overhaul, since the judge based his decision on an obscure and unsettled area of administrative law, lawyers said.

In his ruling on Monday that upended plans to shield millions of people from deportation, U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen avoided diving into sweeping constitutional questions or tackling presidential powers head-on. Instead, he faulted Obama for not giving public notice of his plans.

The failure to do so, Hanen wrote, was a violation of the 1946 Administrative Procedure Act, which requires notice in a publication called the Federal Register as well as an opportunity for people to submit views in writing.

 
The ruling, however narrow, marked an initial victory for 26 states that brought the case alleging Obama had exceeded his powers with executive orders that would let up to 4.7 million illegal immigrants stay without threat of deportation.

"It's a very procedural point – that he did this too quickly," said Michael Kagan, a law professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

Hanen's ruling left in disarray U.S. policy toward the roughly 11 million people in the country illegally. Obama said on Tuesday he disagreed with the ruling and expected his administration to prevail in the courts.

The U.S. Justice Department was preparing an appeal of Hanen's temporary injunction to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, Obama said. The court could consider an emergency request to block Hanen's ruling, potentially within days, although most of the 23 judges on the court were appointed by Republican presidents.

There was no consensus among lawyers with expertise in administrative law and immigration law on whether Hanen would be reversed on appeal. But they said the judge was wise to focus on an area of administrative law where legal precedent is sometimes fuzzy.

In the near term, the narrow approach allowed Hanen to issue a temporary injunction barring federal agencies from putting Obama's plans into place. An appointee of President George W. Bush, Hanen had previously criticized U.S. immigration enforcement as too lax.

BRAKE ON PRESIDENTIAL ACTION

Hanen's ruling turned on the Administrative Procedure Act's requirement that a proposed rule or regulation appear in the Federal Register so people have a chance to comment. The Federal Register is a daily journal of U.S. government proceedings.

The "notice and comment" requirement acts as a brake on all presidents, slowing their plans by months or years.

The requirement, though, does not apply to "interpretative rules" or general statements of policy, an exception that Justice Department lawyers said applied to Obama's announcement in November. Rules that must be submitted for notice and comment are sometimes known as "legislative rules."

For Hanen, the pivotal question became whether the new rules, such as granting work permits to potentially millions of illegal immigrants, was binding on federal agents or merely general guidance. He ruled that they were binding, and that Obama should have allowed for notice and comment.

Lawyers with expertise in administrative law said there was little guidance from the U.S. Supreme Court on what qualifies as a rule that needs to be published, leaving disagreement among lower courts and a grey area for Hanen to work in.

"The case law as to what qualifies as a legislative rule is remarkably unclear," said Anne Joseph O'Connell, a University of California Berkeley law professor.

LENGTHY PROCESS LOOMS

O'Connell said it was hard to predict how the appeals court would rule in the end, although she thought it was likely the court would lift Hanen's temporary injunction and allow the Obama administration to begin putting its program in place.

The subject is not strictly partisan, she said, because sometimes a liberal interest group might favor a strict requirement for notice and comment.

An appeal before the 5th Circuit could take months, as lawyers file written briefs and the court holds oral argument and comes to a decision.

The appeals court could also consider other questions, such as whether the states that brought the lawsuit had what is known as standing to sue or whether Obama violated the clause of the U.S. Constitution that requires presidents to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed."

There is no chance Obama would begin the notice-and-comment period now, because U.S. immigration policy would be frozen in place during the lengthy process, said Peter Margulies, an immigration expert at Roger Williams University School of Law in Rhode Island.

He said it could delay Obama's policy for "a minimum of six to eight months, and potentially much longer."

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/02/18/us-usa-immigration-courts-analysis-idUSKBN0LM02Y20150218

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #137 on: February 23, 2015, 05:38:05 PM »
US seeks stay of ruling on Obama immigration action
Published February 23, 2015
FoxNews.com

The U.S. government asked a federal judge Monday to lift a temporary hold on President Obama’s executive action to protect millions of immigrants from deportation, Fox News has confirmed.

Justice Department lawyers requested a “stay” to delay a federal judge’s decision to block Obama’s immigration order, which legally allows 5 million immigrants to stay in the country.

DOJ lawyers filed the motion for a stay with the court of US District Judge Andrew Hanen in Brownsville, Texas. Last week Hanen issued a preliminary injunction for 26 states suing the US government to stop Obama's executive action on immigration.

The states, led by Texas, have argued Obama's action is unconstitutional and would force increased state investment in law enforcement, health care and education.

The Justice Department is asking Hanen to put his ruling on hold while the federal government appeals the decision. If the stay were to be granted, Obama's immigration action would be allowed to go forward while the lawsuit proceeds through the courts.

Obama announced the executive action in November, saying lack of action by Congress forced him to make sweeping changes to immigration rules on his own. Republicans, who say Obama has overstepped his authority, are blocking funding for the Department of Homeland Security unless Democrats agree to cancel Obama's order.

It is not unheard of for judges to delay rulings they have issued. Last year, a federal judge ruled Texas' same-sex marriage ban unconstitutional but put his decision on hold to allow the state to appeal.  But legal experts say it is unlikely Hanen will put his ruling on hold, because he wrote in his 123-page court order that states would "suffer irreparable harm in this case" if Obama's actions on immigration were to proceed while the lawsuit is argued.

"Based on (Hanen's) language, it stands to reason that if you stay this order then those harms would start to accrue and that's the whole point of him enjoining the order in the first place," said Pratheepan Gulasekaram, a constitutional and immigration law professor at Santa Clara University School of Law in California.

The first of Obama's orders -- to expand a program that protects young immigrants from deportation if they were brought to the U.S. illegally as children -- had been set to start taking effect Feb. 18. The other major part of Obama's order, which extends deportation protections to parents of U.S. citizens and permanent residents who have been in the country for some years, was not expected to begin until May 19.

If Hanen denies the motion for a stay, the Justice Department was expected to take its request to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. Hanen is expected to issue a ruling on the stay by 5 p.m. Wednesday.

But Lourdes Martinez, an attorney with the Immigrant Legal Resource Center in San Francisco said the 5th Circuit is known to be fairly conservative, and is likely to also deny the request for a stay. The request for a stay could ultimately end up before the U.S. Supreme Court.

The stay request is separate from an appeal the federal government is expected to file with the 5th Circuit over Hanen's ruling. That appeal, once filed, would likely take anywhere from four to nine months to be ruled upon, Gulasekaram said.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/02/23/us-seeks-stay-ruling-on-obama-immigration-action/?cmpid=cmty_twitter_fn

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #138 on: February 24, 2015, 09:06:28 AM »
Again: Senate Democrats Filibuster DHS Funding to Protect Obama's Amnesty
Townhall.com ^  | 2/24/2015 | Guy Benson

Posted on ‎2‎/‎24‎/‎2015‎ ‎11‎:‎52‎:‎38‎ ‎AM by Servant of the Cross

For weeks, Harry Reid and his Senate Democratic minority -- with the explicit blessing of the White House -- have been blocking all debate on a House-passed bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security. The House legislation provides full appropriations for DHS, with the small exception of stripping out funds targeted for the implementation President Obama's unpopular and illegal (according to both a federal judge and Obama himself) executive amnesty fiat. Democrats in the upper chamber had already filibustered three attempts to take up, discuss, or amend the House's bill. Last night witnessed round four. Kudos to CNN for its accurate headline -- "Senate Dems Block Homeland Security Funding Bill Again:"





The Republican-led Senate voted Monday -- for the fourth time in as many weeks -- to begin debate on a stalled funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security, which faces a Friday deadline. But like the three votes before it, Senate Democrats blocked taking up the bill that passed the GOP-controlled House because it contains what they consider poison pills -- provisions that would block President Barack Obama's executive orders on immigration. On a measure that needed 60 vote to succeed, it failed with 47 voting in support to 46 against. With only four days before DHS funding ends -- when large parts of the agency will be shuttered or employees will be forced to work without pay -- the two sides are at a stalemate and there are no known serious negotiations involving congressional leaders or the White House to bridge differences. "It's time to allow this Homeland Security funding legislation to come to the floor," a visibly frustrated Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said before the vote." Democrats say they want to amend DHS funding legislation. But then they keep voting to block their own amendments. It just doesn't' make any sense."



Democrats say they're objecting to discussing the bill because it contains "poison pills." Debates and amendments could alter or eliminate some of the items they object to, but they won't even allow that debate to begin. Having lost the most recent election in historic fashion, they've adopted an our-way-or-shutdown approach. It's very simple: Obama and Reid are forcing a (very partial) DHS shutdown in order to protect the president's unilateral action that provides millions of illegal immigrant adults legal status, legal work papers, and in many cases, increased access to generous tax benefits. They are willing to precipitate a DHS shutdown to uphold a power grab that's been struck down in federal court. And they have the gall to complain about the looming DHS shutdown as if it's Republicans' fault:

Here's a crazy idea -- and I'm just spitballing here: How about voting to proceed to a debate on a DHS funding bill, rather than repeatedly filibustering it? This shouldn't be much of a problem, given that numerous Senate Democrats have raised concerns about the Constitutional and policy implication's of Obama's power grab. Senate Republicans produced a document recapping statements from eight members of Harry Reid's caucus expressing their reservations about the very policy they're now unanimously filibustering to protect. With all due respect to hawkish Republicans who are skittish about DHS funding, this is a fight worth having. It's about the Constitutional principle of separation of powers, and it's about sending a message to Democrats about future spending battles. When Republicans were the ones blocking legislation, it was easier for Democrats and the media to paint them as the "party of no." The dynamic has changed, thanks to voters. A united Republican front and message discipline can win the day. This is a decent start:


 @RepBillFlores
 The “Obstructionist 8”: Blocking DHS funding debate despite being
against the president’s unlawful amnesty plan.
 3:14 PM - 23 Feb 2015

I'll leave you with the latest spin from the administration, which is on a credibility-destroying roll this week:

videos at link ....

Dos Equis

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #139 on: February 24, 2015, 10:36:08 AM »
Very interested to see how this plays out.  We will find out in a few days whether the Senate GOP has stones. 

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #140 on: February 25, 2015, 10:16:54 AM »
Obama moves on immigration measures despite judge halting amnesty
By Dave Boyer - The Washington Times
Tuesday, February 24, 2015

The Obama administration moved Tuesday to carry out portions of President Obama’s executive action on immigration even as a federal judge has halted the president’s temporary deportation amnesty.

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced it is extending eligibility to dependent spouses of H1-B visa holders to obtain work permits as part of Mr. Obama’s immigration action. Starting in 90 days about 179,600 immigrants will be eligible for the benefit in the first year.

“Allowing the spouses of these visa holders to legally work in the United States makes perfect sense,” said USCIS Director Leon Rodriguez. “It helps U.S. businesses keep their highly skilled workers by increasing the chances these workers will choose to stay in this country during the transition from temporary workers to permanent residents.”

But Sen. Jeff Sessions, Alabama Republican, said the president was unilaterally implementing “another policy, another program that has not been authorized by law that would add several hundred thousand new workers to our country.”

“There’s been no sense at all by President Obama, the Department of Homeland Security [Secretary] Jeh Johnson, the Democratic members of this Congress, no concern about the employment prospects of lawful immigrants, green card holders and native-born Americans,” Mr. Sessions said. “The first thing we should do is be focusing on getting jobs for Americans that are unemployed. Are we going to keep Americans on welfare and benefits while we bring in more and more foreigners to take jobs when we’ve got Americans ready and willing to take those jobs?”

The move comes as Congress considers an appropriations bill for the Department of Homeland Security that would defund Mr. Obama’s deportation amnesty.

On Tuesday, Sen. Ted Cruz, Texas Republican, questioned Homeland’s Mr. Johnson on whether the administration plans to comply with the court’s injunction to stop the deportation amnesty. He noted that Mr. Obama has pledged publicly to “continue in the planning” of the activities that the court ordered him to stop.

“Violating an unambiguous federal court order by defying its instructions to cease and desist a particular activity would represent a significant breach of your authority, and would be an escalation in abuse of our separation of powers,” Mr. Cruz wrote. “For a president and his cabinet to telegraph intent to violate a federal court order requires additional scrutiny from Congress.”

A federal district judge in Texas last week blocked the amnesty program from going forward. The administration is appealing the ruling, and White House aides said Tuesday they are eager to ease the concerns of illegal immigrants who don’t know whether they’ll be allowed to remain in the U.S.

“It’s important to put [the court ruling] in context, because the broader executive actions are moving forward,” said Cecilia Munoz, White House domestic policy director. “The administration continues to implement the portions of the actions that the president and the Department of Homeland Security took, which were not affected by the court’s ruling.”

Mr. Obama will hold a town hall meeting in Miami Wednesday, televised on the Spanish-language network Telemundo, where he’s expected to address concerns about the court ruling.

“The president will continue to fight both for immigration reform as well as for the implementation of these actions, because they’re the right thing to do,” Ms. Munoz said. “You will hear the president express the confidence that we will prevail at the end of the day in court.”

In addition to the work permits for certain spouses, Ms. Munoz said, the administration is moving ahead with proposed changes to legal immigration, changes in enforcement priorities “and many other elements” of Mr. Obama’s executive action that he announced last November.

USCIS is estimating that about 55,000 immigrant spouses will be eligible for the work permits annually after the first year of the program. Mr. Rodriguez said the action will allow those spouses to remain in the U.S. beyond what would otherwise be a six-year limit.

“This is important because the inability of those spouses until now to apply for employment has imposed, in many cases, significant hardships on the families of H1-B visa holders,” he said. “This will now facilitate the ability of those families to remain in the United States.”

. . .

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/feb/24/obama-moves-on-immigration-amnesty-despite-judges-/#ixzz3SmXnTQLx

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #141 on: February 27, 2015, 11:34:20 AM »
Rubio: I've learned lesson on immigration
February 27, 2015
By Cameron Joseph

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) told the Conservative Political Action Conference that he's learned he was wrong on his approach to immigration reform.

Rubio, a onetime Tea Party favorite whose support for a comprehensive immigration reform package hurt him with the base, told the conservative crowd that he now understands U.S. borders must be secured before anything else can be done.
"It wasn't very popular, I don't know if you know that from some of the folks here," Rubio said with a smile, earning laughs from the crowd, when asked about his earlier support for the bill by Fox News host Sean Hannity.

"You have 10 or 12 million people in this country, many of whom have lived here for longer than a decade, have not otherwise violated our law other than immigration laws, I get all that," Rubio said. "But what I've learned is you can't even have a conversation about that until people believe and know, not just believe but it's proven to them that future illegal immigration will be controlled."

That tone is a big change from his support for the 2013 bipartisan comprehensive immigration reform bill that badly wounded him with the GOP base, though it's a return to the views he held before he joined the bipartisan group.

Rubio said recent border issues had proven his earlier approach was wrong, calling a border security first approach "the only way forward."

"You can't just tell people you're going to secure the border, we're going to do E-Verify, you have to do that, they have to see it, they have to see it working, and then they're going to have a reasonable conversation with you about the other parts, but they're not going to even want to talk about that until that's done first. And what's happened over the last two years, the migratory crisis this summer, the two executive orders, that's even more true than it's been

Rubio's shift on the issue is the latest sign he's leaning towards a presidential run, as he looks to repair relations with conservatives. It's also a marked split from his former mentor and likely opponent, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R), who has doubled down on his support for immigration reform.

Rubio's speech itself focused on his two core messages: American exceptionalism and a need to help the working class get ahead — with Rubio's personal anecdotes getting the strongest response.

"For me America isn't just a country, it's a place that literally changed the history of my family," he said as the audience nodded along attentively. "America doesn't owe me anything, but I have a debt to America that I will never be able to repay."

Rubio kept his speech very short, using just over six minutes of the twelve he was allowed and leaving the rest for questions. The CPAC hall was mostly full despite his early speaking time, though the final few rows filled in with bleary-eyed college students a few minutes after he took the stage.

The audience's response was a bit muted compared to the one some Thursday speakers received. That's likely more because Rubio had less red-meat applause lines built into the speech and because the crowd was dragging a bit after a likely party-filled night.

Hannity joked about how many in attendance "weren't feeling well this morning, you were up late drinking," earning laughs from the crowd and pointing out he had his own water bottle with him.

Rubio also got strong cheers for slamming Democrats' foreign policy.

"Because of the Obama-Clinton foreign policy our allies no longer trust us and our enemies no longer fear us," he said to applause before ripping "a foreign policy that treats the ayatollah of Iran with more respect than the prime minister of Israel."

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/234088-rubio-to-cpac-ive-learned-on-immigration

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #142 on: February 27, 2015, 11:49:21 AM »
Rubio: I've learned lesson on immigration
February 27, 2015
By Cameron Joseph

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) told the Conservative Political Action Conference that he's learned he was wrong on his approach to immigration reform.

Rubio, a onetime Tea Party favorite whose support for a comprehensive immigration reform package hurt him with the base, told the conservative crowd that he now understands U.S. borders must be secured before anything else can be done.

flipflopping. 

He really is McCain Jr.

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #143 on: February 27, 2015, 12:03:48 PM »
 ::)
Rubio: I've learned lesson on immigration
February 27, 2015
By Cameron Joseph

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) told the Conservative Political Action Conference that he's learned he was wrong on his approach to immigration reform.

Rubio, a onetime Tea Party favorite whose support for a comprehensive immigration reform package hurt him with the base, told the conservative crowd that he now understands U.S. borders must be secured before anything else can be done.
"It wasn't very popular, I don't know if you know that from some of the folks here," Rubio said with a smile, earning laughs from the crowd, when asked about his earlier support for the bill by Fox News host Sean Hannity.

"You have 10 or 12 million people in this country, many of whom have lived here for longer than a decade, have not otherwise violated our law other than immigration laws, I get all that," Rubio said. "But what I've learned is you can't even have a conversation about that until people believe and know, not just believe but it's proven to them that future illegal immigration will be controlled."

That tone is a big change from his support for the 2013 bipartisan comprehensive immigration reform bill that badly wounded him with the GOP base, though it's a return to the views he held before he joined the bipartisan group.

Rubio said recent border issues had proven his earlier approach was wrong, calling a border security first approach "the only way forward."

"You can't just tell people you're going to secure the border, we're going to do E-Verify, you have to do that, they have to see it, they have to see it working, and then they're going to have a reasonable conversation with you about the other parts, but they're not going to even want to talk about that until that's done first. And what's happened over the last two years, the migratory crisis this summer, the two executive orders, that's even more true than it's been

Rubio's shift on the issue is the latest sign he's leaning towards a presidential run, as he looks to repair relations with conservatives. It's also a marked split from his former mentor and likely opponent, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R), who has doubled down on his support for immigration reform.

Rubio's speech itself focused on his two core messages: American exceptionalism and a need to help the working class get ahead — with Rubio's personal anecdotes getting the strongest response.

"For me America isn't just a country, it's a place that literally changed the history of my family," he said as the audience nodded along attentively. "America doesn't owe me anything, but I have a debt to America that I will never be able to repay."

Rubio kept his speech very short, using just over six minutes of the twelve he was allowed and leaving the rest for questions. The CPAC hall was mostly full despite his early speaking time, though the final few rows filled in with bleary-eyed college students a few minutes after he took the stage.

The audience's response was a bit muted compared to the one some Thursday speakers received. That's likely more because Rubio had less red-meat applause lines built into the speech and because the crowd was dragging a bit after a likely party-filled night.

Hannity joked about how many in attendance "weren't feeling well this morning, you were up late drinking," earning laughs from the crowd and pointing out he had his own water bottle with him.

Rubio also got strong cheers for slamming Democrats' foreign policy.

"Because of the Obama-Clinton foreign policy our allies no longer trust us and our enemies no longer fear us," he said to applause before ripping "a foreign policy that treats the ayatollah of Iran with more respect than the prime minister of Israel."

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/234088-rubio-to-cpac-ive-learned-on-immigration

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #144 on: February 27, 2015, 12:48:38 PM »
If its Rubio, Jeb, or Christie... we are doomed.

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #145 on: February 27, 2015, 01:46:15 PM »
If its Rubio, Jeb, or Christie... we are doomed.
:)

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #146 on: February 27, 2015, 01:52:08 PM »
I actually think all three could be good leaders, but I really hope it isn't Jeb.  No more Bushes or Clintons please. 

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #147 on: February 27, 2015, 02:10:36 PM »
Very interested to see how this plays out.  We will find out in a few days whether the Senate GOP has stones. 

They do not. 

Congress close in on short-term Homeland Security bill
Feb 27, 11:46 AM (ET)
By ERICA WERNER and DAVID ESPO

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress closed in Friday on approving a short-term spending bill for the Homeland Security Department that would avert a partial agency shutdown hours before it was to begin.

The legislation also leaves intact Obama administration executive actions on immigration that Republicans have vowed to overturn. But Republicans insisted that passing a short-term bill preserved their ability to keep fighting them.

An early vote in the House clearing the way for final passage of the bill was approved easily, 240-183.

"The House must pass this bill in short order to keep the lights on at the Department of Homeland Security in the near term," said Rep. Harold Rogers, R-Ky. "Hopefully, this will buy us this additional time that we clearly need."

Republicans had already admitted defeat. As debate proceeded in the House, the Senate voted 68-31 to approve a full-year bill free of contentious immigration provisions. Some House Republicans predicted that they would eventually end up doing the same thing.

For now, the three-week stopgap measure would allow lawmakers to keep the Homeland Security Department running at a time of heightened threats worldwide — even if it does little more than postpone the fight for another day.

"It's the best solution that we have available to us right now," said Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark. "Nobody wants to shut down the Department of Homeland Security."

The bill would extend current funding levels for the department until March 19. Without action, DHS would begin to shut down at midnight Friday, furloughing 30,000 workers. Another 200,000 would be deemed essential and continue to report to work, albeit without pay.

In a complicated series of votes occurring simultaneously on both ends of the Capitol, the House prepared to vote on the three-week plan and send it to the Senate, while the Senate held a series of votes including approval of a "clean" bill to fund DHS through the Sept. 30 end of the budget year, without immigration provisions.

Once the House had acted on the three-week measure, the short-term bill was expected to also pass the Senate and gain Obama's signature.

Adding an element of drama, House Democrats announced plans to oppose the three-week stopgap measure, forcing Speaker John Boehner to pass it with exclusively Republican votes. But the bill appeared to command enough support to pass, even though it faced opposition from the right and the left.
Some of the most conservative Republicans said they couldn't support the legislation because it would not stop Obama's immigration policies granting work permits and deportation stays to millions of immigrants who live illegally in the United States. The argument advanced by leadership-aligned lawmakers that a federal judge has already put those policies on hold was unpersuasive to this group.

"I am not going to vote under any circumstances to fund illegal conduct," said Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala. "It does not make any difference whether the funding is for three weeks, three months or a full fiscal year. If it's illegal, it's illegal."

Some of the more establishment-minded lawmakers, by contrast, said the House should not be wasting its time with a stopgap bill but should accept the inevitable and vote to fund the department through the rest of the year with no strings attached. Since Senate Democrats have refused to agree to a spending bill rolling back Obama's immigration policies, and Obama has threatened to veto any such legislation, these lawmakers argued the House would have to retreat in the end anyway.

"The only question is when — tomorrow or in three weeks," said Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pa. "Some folks just have a harder time facing political reality than others."

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, who has been on Capitol Hill every day lobbying lawmakers to fund his department, sent a plea to congressional leaders Thursday asking them to pass a full-year bill, not a stop-gap measure. "A short-term continuing resolution exacerbates the uncertainty for my workforce and puts us back in the same position, on the brink of a shutdown just days from now," Johnson wrote.

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20150227/us--congress-homeland-d09c304e78.html

James

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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #148 on: February 27, 2015, 04:47:32 PM »


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Re: Amnesty Coming to a Town Near You
« Reply #149 on: February 27, 2015, 06:25:08 PM »
I actually think all three could be good leaders, but I really hope it isn't Jeb.  No more Bushes or Clintons please. 

Rubio is obama lite