Obama
vows more humane immigration law enforcement
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[March 14, 2014]
By Mark Felsenthal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) — President Barack
Obama has directed his Department of Homeland Security to enforce
immigration laws "more humanely," the White House said on Thursday.
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The president made the pledge at a meeting with members of the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus at the White House.
Obama pledged to work with them to pressure congressional
Republicans to pass immigration reform, a second-term priority for
him that appears stalled.
"He has asked Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson to do an
inventory of the Department's current practices to see how it can
conduct enforcement more humanely within the confines of the law,"
the White House said.
The president has come under fire from Latino groups for deportation
practices, and immigration rights groups urged him to back his words
with action.
"The president has no excuse to continue his unjust deportation
policy,' the National Day Laborer Organizing Network said in a
statement.
Despite some support, congressional Republicans are divided over
immigration reform and party leaders have made clear legislation is
unlikely to be taken up before the November congressional elections.
Republicans hope to extend their advantage in the House of
Representatives and regain control of the Senate.
In not waiting for Congress to act on immigration, Obama is
following a pattern he has used to advance his agenda in other areas
that congressional Republicans have opposed, such as raising the
minimum wage. Unable to get lawmakers interested in legislation, the
president used his executive power to increase the minimum wage for
federal contractors.
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Obama's record on enforcing immigration laws has been a sore spot
for some reform advocates. The president faced criticism in his
first term for not using his executive power to ease deportations of
illegal immigrants.
But before his re-election in 2012, he had Homeland Security
temporarily halt deportations of undocumented children who were
brought to the United States by their parents.
The president has enjoyed strong support among Hispanic voters and
wants to rally support for Democrats in November's elections. But he
has faced criticism from some Latino groups for not pushing harder
on immigration reform.
(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; editing by Peter Cooney and Ken
Wills)
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