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On Immigration, Obama
Assumes Upper Hand
By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and MARK LANDLER
WASHINGTON — As the specifics of immigration legislation take shape on Capitol Hill,
President Obama is making it clear that he wants the overhaul on his terms.
Officials in the West Wing are convinced that the politics of the immigration issue have firmly
shifted in their direction. That belief is fueling the president's push for quick action and broad
changes that go beyond what Republicans are signaling would be acceptable if they are to back
legislation that allows a path to citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants.
The administration's confidence — which was communicated to immigration advocates in a
series of conference calls and meetings last week — is rooted in the sense among the president's
political advisers that Republicans are eager to embrace broad immigration changes as a way of
improving their electoral appeal among Hispanic voters.
"We're giving them some space," said Dan Pfeiffer, a senior adviser to the president. But in the
meantime, he said, "we're going to continue to make the case to the country about why
immigration reform should be done and to put pressure on Republicans that they need to do it."
While aides say Mr. Obama is open to some negotiation over the contours of the immigration
changes he laid out Tuesday in Las Vegas, senior administration officials are convinced that
there is little risk in pushing hard for Mr. Obama's immigration priorities, betting that
Republicans will think twice about voting down a bill championed by a president who is highly
popular among the very voters they covet.
The principles Mr. Obama embraced this week differ in some central ways from the effort under
way in the Senate, where Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, and Senator Charles E. Schumer,
Democrat of New York, and six other senators are working toward a bill that could be debated
and voted on as early as this summer.
Mr. Rubio and the other senators have said illegal immigrants would not be given a pathway to
citizenship until the government had taken certain measures — so far unspecified — to secure
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the border. The White House fears that could become a source of endless delays for immigrants
eager to become citizens. The Senate outline also includes a guest worker program for low-
income workers, something Mr. Obama and his allies have been concerned about in the past.
In legislative fights over health care and stimulus spending in his first term, the president and
his team earned scorn from their own supporters for being too willing to compromise. Liberal
activists who helped Mr. Obama get elected in 2008 criticized him for trading away a public
insurance option to secure passage of the Affordable Care Act.
But immigration advocates and White House officials say the dynamic is different now. With his
re-election secured and the Republican electoral problems obvious, the president is more likely
to stand his ground, they say.
"They know that the political momentum is on their side," said an immigrant advocate whose
group participated in conference calls with White House officials last week. "They are pretty
confident that they have a broad cross section of civil society behind him on this."
Asked whether White House officials seemed willing to compromise with Republicans to ensure
passage, the advocate said, "That is not the message we heard at all."
Mr. Obama, in an interview Wednesday with the Spanish-language network Univision, rejected
Mr. Rubio's criticism that he was not paying enough attention to border security.
"We have done more on border security in the last four years than we have done in the previous
20," the president said. "We've actually done almost everything that Republicans asked to be
done several years ago as a precondition to move forward on comprehensive immigration
reform."
The president's aides said he would welcome legislation that met his principles but that could
also earn broad, bipartisan support in the Senate. They believe that a vote of 8o or more
senators from both parties would put more pressure on Republican lawmakers who control the
House. But the White House is also willing to fight for a more partisan immigration measure if
need be, advisers said. Already there is evidence that Mr. Obama may end up with a messy
political fight in spite of the show of bipartisan spirit on display in the Senate this week.
In a statement, Mr. Rubio said he was "concerned" by Mr. Obama's unwillingness to require
border security enhancement before illegal immigrants are eligible for citizenship. Mr. Rubio
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told Rush Limbaugh, the conservative radio host, that the president could "either decide he
wants to be part of a solution, or he can decide that he wants to be part of a political issue."
Other Republicans were more scathing about any effort to provide citizenship to illegal
immigrants. Senator David Vitter, Republican of Louisiana, on Wednesday called Mr. Rubio
"amazingly naive" and "nuts" for believing that Mr. Obama would ever enforce the border.
"It didn't happen under Reagan, but ifs going to happen under President Obama?" Mr. Vitter
said in an interview on Laura Ingraham's radio program.
In his speech in Las Vegas, Mr. Obama made it clear what he would do if the senators failed to
produce legislation that could pass the Senate and the House. If that happens, he promised to
"send up a bill based on my proposal and insist that they vote on it right away."
But in the meantime, aides said Mr. Obama would insist that any final legislation met his goals.
White House officials describe Tuesday's speech in Las Vegas as the opening act in a sustained
campaign.
Speaking to another Spanish-language network, Telemundo, Mr. Obama said Wednesday that
he hoped to see legislation pass by the end of the year, if not in the first six months.
One area of potential disagreement is likely to be the speed and certainty with which illegal
immigrants can apply for and earn citizenship. Mr. Rubio is pushing for legislation that would
deny green cards or citizenship applications until an independent board certifies that the
government has secured the border.
One senior administration official played down the differences between Mr. Obama's proposals
and those of the bipartisan group.
"At the end of the day," the official said, "we think we know how to get this done in a way that's
fair."
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