President Obama’s announcement on immigration policy clearly has sweeping implications. The substance of the measure, which will benefit hundreds of thousands of families, is what matters most, but it’s an election year and moves like these affect the electoral landscape in a big way — especially for the president’s opponent.
While Obama’s willingness to implement the goals of the DREAM Act is likely to boost his support among Latino voters, Republican Mitt Romney has found himself in a far more uncomfortable position. This was evident on yesterday’s “Face the Nation” — a rare non-Fox appearance for Romney — where he didn’t want to talk about the president’s move.
alienated Latino voters to such a remarkable degree — he’s arguably the most anti-immigrant major party nominee in a generation.
But Romney also hoped to shake the Etch A Sketch on the issue, expressing tacit support for Sen. Marco Rubio’s (R-Fla.) still-non-existent, watered-down version of the DREAM Act. Obama has made this shift vastly more difficult, if not impossible.
Steve Kornacki explained the other day:








