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			 A vocal group of conservatives in the House of Representatives is 
			pressing to use government funding as leverage to prevent any White 
			House moves that would allow millions of undocumented immigrants to 
			stay and work in the United States. 
 Several Republicans, including some in leadership, have said they 
			were trying to find alternatives that would stop short of directly 
			threatening a government shutdown, and Republican lawmakers on 
			Sunday talk shows acknowledged that the shutdown threat was a less 
			than ideal approach.
 
 "It doesn't solve the problem. But look, we're having those 
			discussions... We're going to continue to meet about this. I know 
			the House leaders are talking about, the Senate leaders are talking 
			about it," said South Dakota Republican John Thune, who chairs the 
			Senate Republican Conference, on "Fox News Sunday".
 
			
			 "Republicans are looking at different options about how best to 
			respond to the president's unilateral action, which many people 
			believe is unconstitutional, unlawful action on this particular 
			issue."
 Obama is expected to announce a series of executive actions on 
			immigration issues before the end of the year, Secretary of Homeland 
			Security Jeh Johnson said on Saturday.
 
 Thune and Republican Representative Tom Cole said Obama's expected 
			use of executive power on the issue was what fueled partisanship and 
			lack of cooperation.
 
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			"I think the president wants a fight. I think he’s actually trying 
			to bait us into doing some of these extreme things that have been 
			suggested. I don’t think we will," Oklahoma Representative Tom Cole 
			said on ABC's "This Week".
 Cole said a shutdown was an inappropriate tool and urged a legal 
			challenge to Obama's action.
 
 Democratic Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois said House 
			Speaker John Boehner could move on the immigration bill already 
			passed by the Senate, whose control Republicans gain next year as a 
			result of this month's elections.
 
 "The message of the last election was, 'solve problems, don't just 
			go to a political standoff, do something,'" Durbin said on CNN's 
			"State of the Union". "If the Republicans fail to do it, then the 
			president will act and I will support it."
 
 (Reporting by Bill Trott, Anna Yukhananov and Alina Selyukh; Writing 
			by Alina Selyukh; Editing by Stephen Powell)
 
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