Lets say we've got eleven million illegal residents, and Congress has allocated money enough to deport 400,000 a year. (I think I read those numbers somewhere.) Congress instructed the president, since, clearly, the illegals can't be exported all at once, to set priorities as to which ones should be focused on. The president, according to Congress, should decide who gets deported now, and whose deportation is to be deferred.
Obama has, therefore, decided that certain people can be deferred: those who
- have been here for five years,
- have children here covered by the Dream Act, and
- who register and pay taxes and stay out of trouble.
This is not thwarting or challenging Congress; it is complying with the instructions of Congress.
"Let's say" someone is fishing for an ex post facto rationalization for the Obama shamnesty, what better way than to speculate on how the poor President, sold by the left as being a "Deporter in Chief" (wink, wink) , is dialing back his efforts, reluctently shielding 1/2 of all illegals from deportation because of unspecified funding shortages. And, in fact, the rationalization goes, his actions are what Congress wants.
As a matter of protocol, I usually find it more productive to reply to actual quoted positions of Obama, than argue against a poster's reaching for a speculative rationalization. That said, the rationale is so full of holes I couldn't let the swiss cheese logic pass.
Obama, like every prior President, has already exercised the choice of who to focus on for deportation. And like every President, he has also had the choice to demand his Democratic Congress, and/or Democratic Senate to focus on much greater funding for more border security and more deportation agents. And Presidents have done their prioritizing without feeling compelled by 'budgets" to deliver "cant wait to legalize" and give green cards to 5 million illegals.
Think about it, that makes about as much sense as the FBI declaring 1/2 the mafia are now granted a legal protection because they want everyone in America to know they will be busy on the other half.
In any event, we already know that Obama
has not spend the last year threatening to shield 5 million illegals from deportation IF Congress did not significantly fund greater border security and deportation agents. That was not his goal. His threats were that unless Congress gives him the "comprehensive immigration reform" he wants, he would do the reforming himself; i.e. he would impose his goal of legalizing 5 million illegals.
Finally, claiming that Obama is only responding to Congressional instructions to give shamnesty is bullocks. You'd have to be deaf and blind to not know Congress has expressed its fierce opposition to the shamnesty, not only by most Republicans in the House and Senate, but also by many moderate Democrats. Democratic Sens. Mary Landrieu (D-LA), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Mark Warner (D-VA), and Al Franken (D-MN), each came out publicly against the president’s executive action. Democratic Reps. Ron Barber (D-AZ), Ann Kirkpatrick (D-AZ), and Cheri Bustos (D-IL) also came out publicly against it as well.
Heck, prior to the shamnesty, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid failed to get more than five of his other Senate Democrats to sign a recent letter to Obama backing him on it. And Obama is well aware that the people have elected a new Congress, is even more opposed than this one.
"Carrying out the instructions of Congress" for a shamnesty, my ass.
Maybe the president shouldn't have the power of discretion over deportation, but I'm skeptical. I don't think this was Obama's subject on 3/31/08. If you can substantiate that Obama was on that subject, then maybe you'll have a point.
I'm sorry, you provided no basis for the source of your skepticism. You need to substantiate the basis of your questioning a direct quote.
The weird thing is that he said it is tempting to change laws on his own. Very weird.
Yes it is very weird, darkly suggestive of Obama's personal makeup.
But the president following the instructions Congress by setting deportation priorities is not changing a law. It is complying with a law---which is how our system works, is how democracy functions; is how our Constitution is written.
One can set priorities without legalizing 5 million illegals, should they wish - you know, like Clinton, Bush, and Obama managed to do up to this point. Law enforcement sets priorities routinely on every other crime, without feeling compelled to legalize 1/2 the criminal class. (Duh).
So, once again, you have an Obama quote which doesn't contradict or disparage what Obama is doing today.
“This is something I’ve struggled with throughout my presidency. The problem is that I’m the president of the United States, I’m not the emperor of the United States. My job is to execute laws that are passed. And Congress right now has not changed what I consider to be a broken immigration system. And what that means is that we have certain obligations to enforce the laws that are in place even if we think that in many cases the results may be tragic.” (2/14/13)
Once again, there's nothing damning about this. He's still the president. He's still not an emperor. His job is still to execute the laws. Congress still hasn't fixed the broken system. He still has to enforce the laws that are in place. Some of the results will still be tragic.
All he's done is offer a little clarity, saying, in effect: "I can only deport so many people a year, and this particular group deserves to know that (so long as they register and pay taxes and stay out of trouble) they aren't first in line."
As you do little more than repeat denial, laced with factual irrelevancies, I am reminded of the admonition that "you can't reason someone out of something that they did not, originally, reason themselves into". Obama-bot loyal drones may be soothed by their mutual buzzing in the hive of denial, but it does not impress those of us who do not tend to the 'queen'.
Obama's statement is self-evident. He is not emperor and therefore he must enforce the deportation laws, even if he thinks the system is broken. Congress has chosen to leave the laws, and the mandate to deport, as they were written - even if he thinks the results may be tragic (i.e. deporting illegals).
He is intentionally being unfaithful to the explicit mandate of the law, giving immunity to mandated deportation to 5 million. He is, in his own words, acting as Emperor, attempting to "fix" a system that he has no right to fix (and in reality, is actually doing a good job breaking the system).