Obama Defends Immigrant Deportation Rules, Criticized as Political - East Idaho News
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Obama Defends Immigrant Deportation Rules, Criticized as Political

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146397794?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1339788392690Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) — President Obama flashed anger today as a reporter interrupted his speech on immigration in the Rose Garden.

Neil Munro of The Daily Caller, a conservative news site, shouted at Obama in the middle of his speech formally announcing looser deportation rules, “Why do you favor foreigners over American workers?”

Irritated, Obama glared at Munro and told him not to interrupt, said he “didn’t ask for an argument” and said the new order is “the right thing to do.”

The change on immigration relaxes rules for younger illegal immigrants who haven’t broken the law since coming into the country as children, a move that has riled Republicans while bringing the issue back into the fore of the 2012 election. The Homeland Security Department will no longer deport such immigrants, and work permits will be given to them.

The more lenient deportation rules are similar to the proposals in the DREAM Act, legislation supported by Obama but blocked in Congress.

“We’re a better nation than one that expels innocent young kids,” Obama said in his speech before he was interrupted.

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The Obama administration denied that politics played a role in the announcement, but the timing is ideal for the president’s re-election campaign. In the GOP primary, Mitt Romney adopted strictly conservative positions against illegal immigration in his effort to woo right-wing voters. He backs a strong fence along the border with Mexico, opposes most amnesty and boasts of his move as Massachusetts governor to deny in-state tuition for illegal immigrants.

Democrats have said they plan to hold Romney to those positions, painting him as a candidate with extreme views on immigration. Romney’s campaign stumbled last month when the Republican National Committee’s director of Hispanic outreach told reporters that Romney was “still deciding what his position on immigration is,” fueling the notion that he holds few true convictions.

In a brief statement Friday afternoon, Mitt Romney took issue with the president’s decision, saying that the administration’s policy shift “makes reaching a long-term solution more difficult.”

Romney’s full statement reads, “I believe the status of young people who come here through no fault of their own is an important matter to be considered and should be solved on a long term basis so they know what their  future would be in this country. I think the action the President took today makes it more difficult to reach that long term solution because an executive order is of course just a short term matter, it can be reversed by subsequent presidents. I’d like to see legislation that deals with this issue and I happen to agree with Marco Rubio as he considered this issue. He said that this is an important matter and we have to find a long term solution but that the president’s action makes reaching a long term solution more difficult. If I’m president, we’ll do our very best to have that kind of long term solution that provides certainty and clarity to the people who come into this country through no fault of their own by virtue of the action of their parents. Thank you.”

When reporters pressed Romney to answer whether he would reverse the policy if elected, Romney turned and walked back onto his campaign bus. Romney made the comments after an ice cream social he held in the small southern New Hampshire town of Milford — the second stop on his five-day, six-state bus tour.

Kevin Madden, a former Romney adviser, today said on MSNBC that, “there are going to be a lot more questions here, I think particularly up on Capitol Hill and the Congress’ role in whether or not they believe that the president can go out and around Capitol Hill and around legislatures and around Congress on something like this.”

Obama’s announcement today is likely to carry favor with Hispanics, a key growing voting bloc that could determine the winner in November in important states like Florida, Colorado and Nevada. The president beats Romney among Hispanics in polls, but most Latinos say they disapprove of Obama’s deportation policy. Obama also plans to speak to the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials in Florida next week, as will Romney.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano today denied that the plan was crafted at the direction of the White House.

“No, this was developed by the department,” she told ABC News. “It was developed within my office, and it was, as I said, before a logical progression from decisions we have been making over the last three, three-and-a-half years.”

Under the new rules, up to 800,000 immigrants will be affected. Deportation will no longer apply to immigrants who came into the country before they were 16 and are now younger than 30, have lived here for five straight years, have never been convicted of a crime or graduated from high school or got a GED.

Such immigrants will be allowed to apply for a two-year work permit that can be renewed unlimited times.

GOP Rep. Steve King of Iowa released a statement saying he was “outraged” by the new rules. “The American people have rejected amnesty because it will erode the Rule of Law,” he said. “In much the same way, I believe the American people will reject President Obama for his repeated efforts to violate the Constitutional separation of powers.”

Rep. Peter King of New York, the Republican chairman of the House committee on homeland security, said the White House is “overstepping its authority by weakening immigration laws without Congressional approval.”

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