President Obama has said that there is 'a window' of opportunity when the US can achieve comprehensive
immigration reform. At his first press conference after the election he said 'My
expectation is that we get a bill introduced and we begin the process in
Congress very soon after my inauguration.' He said that his administration was
considering the best way of going about it and said that he was 'very confident'
that he would succeed. The President's inauguration will take place on 21st
January 2013. At this ceremony, he will swear an oath to defend the Constitution
of the United States.
President Obama promised to reform immigration
in the 2008 presidential campaign too. He failed to do so. He has since said
that this is because the global financial crisis engulfed the US economy and he
spent all his time dealing with that. Critics of the President say that he
failed to use his strong mandate to reform the system. The President's
Democratic Party won control of Congress at the 2008 elections too. They say
that the president could have forced reform through Congress but was not
prepared to take a lead on the issue. In 2010, after mid-term elections, the
President's Democratic Party lost control of Congress and it became much harder
for him to pass legislation.
The 2010 elections saw the Democrats'
main rivals, the Republicans, take control of one of the two chambers of
Congress, the House of Representatives, while the Democrats kept control of the
Senate. This meant that some measure of bipartisan support was required for any
act to be passed because, for a proposed law to be passed, it must be approved
by both houses of Congress and signed by the President. Sadly, the atmosphere in
Congress was bitterly confrontational and there was no cooperation to speak of.
Congress was said to be 'gridlocked' because no laws could be passed as the two
sides blocked each other's every move.
At the same time as the
Presidential election of 2012, many seats in the Senate and all seats in the
House of Representatives were up for election. After the election, the
Republicans retained control of the House of Representatives and the Democrats
kept control of the Senate so Congress is still gridlocked.
The
senior Republican in the House of Representatives, John Boehner, said last week
that the US immigration
system needed to be reformed as it was 'broken'. He hinted at Republican
cooperation in reforming the system. One Republican Senator Lyndsay Graham said
that he would cooperate with Democrat Charles Schumer to introduce the Schumer
Graham Act which would reform the system. But the mood in much of the Republican
Party remains angry and obstructive. The Republican Party has moved to the right
in recent years since the rise of the Tea Party, an activist pressure group that
supports right-wing candidates and lobbies to have centrist candidates
deselected. The Tea Party opposes cooperation in Congress so it is possible that
it will remain gridlocked.
However, Washington commentators say that
there is an opportunity for reform. Many Republican analysts and politicians
blame the defeat for the Republican candidate Mitt Romney at the election on
November 6th on his failure to connect with Hispanic voters. President Obama won
about 66% of the Hispanic vote at the election. Most pollsters say that this
heavy voting among the US's 24m Hispanic voters was enough to win the election
for Mr Obama. Mr Romney promised that he would reform the country's immigration
system but also promised that he would do all he could to ensure that illegal
immigrants, most of whom are Hispanic, were expelled from the
US.
Demographic experts say that Hispanics are the fastest growing
minority in the US and that there will be nearly 40m Hispanic voters by 2030.
Most mainstream Republicans believe that their party will have to agree to
reform if it is to have any chance of taking a greater percentage of the
Hispanic vote.
This may force them to support
reform.
Comprehensive reform of immigration will have to involve
• strengthening the US/Mexico border to prevent further illegal
immigration
• preventing illegal immigrants from working in the US
•
Providing a path to citizenship for illegal migrants already in the
country
President Obama told his press conference 'This has not
historically been a partisan issue, so we need to seize the
moment.'
Global Visa Support offers a variety of programs in United States of America. Please
visit our USA page for more information: http://www.globalvisasupport.com/usa.html
No comments:
Post a Comment