The time wasn’t right for immigration reform in the pre-Obama era. Republicans aren’t comfortable passing it in the Obama era. Now the post-Obama era isn’t looking so hot either.
Last week, Speaker John Boehner announced just days after releasing a set of principles for immigration reform that his members were reluctant to pass any legislation on the issue at all under President Obama, since they were concerned the White House would refuse to enforce its security provisions.
Sen. Chuck Schumer, who co-sponsored a bipartisan immigration bill that passed in June, offered up a novel solution to Boehner’s dilemma on NBC’s Meet The Press: Pass immigration reform now, but delay its implementation until someone new is in the Oval Office.
“I think the rap against him that he actually won’t enforce the law is false—he’s deported more people than any other president,” Schumer said. “But you could actually have the law start in 2017 without doing much violence to it.”
That idea went over like a lead balloon with the speaker’s office. “The suggestion is entirely impractical, since it would totally eliminate the president’s incentive to enforce immigration law for the remainder of his term,” spokesman Michael Steel told NBC News.
The implication seems to be that Obama, who has presided over record-setting deportation rates, is only doing so now because there’s an immigration debate going on.
But Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, an influential voice in conservative policy circles, raised a different problem with the Schumer proposal to msnbc: The party’s concerns might not end with Obama.
“I don’t think that’s going to happen in our conference,” he said. “It’s not just that there’s a strong distrust of the president’s ability to function in good faith on this issue in light of what happened, but we don’t know who’s going to be president in 2017.”
To Republican Rep. Matt Salmon of Arizona, Schumer’s proposal was “bizarre” and “somewhat irresponsible” – but for the exact opposite reason Jordan laid out.
“I understand why a lot of folks are concerned and it’s strictly on the border enforcement and interior enforcement, but we should be passing legislation based on what’s right for the country not who the current actors are, who’s in office,” he said.









