Seizing the opportunity to define his legacy on immigration, President Obama on Thursday will unveil the most sweeping executive actions on the issue in U.S. history, setting the stage for a political retribution from Republicans who have vowed to fight him “tooth-and nail.”
The president will lay out the details of his unilateral actions during a prime-time address Thursday evening in a pitch to an American public weary from years of failed attempts to overhaul the immigration system amid a deeply-divided Congress. After that, the president will hit the road Friday, traveling to the Las Vegas high school where he first made his push form immigration reform nearly two years ago.
The announcement is sure to enrage many Republicans, who argue the president is overstepping his authority. Some are threatening to derail an upcoming spending bill, due by Dec. 11, to keep the government running, as political leverage. Several dozen House Republicans have signed on to tie funding for the executive action to a spending bill, setting in motion another possible showdown over a government shutdown.
Related: Nearly half of Americans disapprove of Obama immigration plan
Others have gone as far as to say the president should be impeached, while House Speaker John Boehner is currently preparing to sue President Obama for executive overreach.
Meanwhile, GOP firebrand Sen. Ted Cruz has already called on his Senate colleagues to block any Obama nominee (save for “vital” national security positions) as long as “illegal amnesty” exists.
Establishment Republicans and others in the GOP leadership have asked that the president wait until after the lame-duck session, when Republicans are set to take over both chambers in the new Congress convening in January.
“My question to the president is, why couldn’t he wait and see what this new Congress does. Give them some time. Not a deadline. But some time,” Arizona Sen. John McCain told MSNBC’s Chris Matthews. “You’ll know whether they are going to be able to move forward or not. You don’t have to set a timetable. And see then. But obviously that’s not going to be the case. “
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Though the scope of proposed action remains unclear, the president is expected to provide relief to undocumented immigrants who have U.S.-born children, and those with high-tech skills. The president is not able to provide a pathway to citizenship for immigrants, but the White House argues that it is within his power to protect large swaths of the undocumented immigrant population from deportation. The action is unlikely to provide health care benefits for those protected by it and may not cover the parents of young immigrants, according to The New York Times.
The announcement follows months of preparations and delays as the Obama administration searched for options to address immigration without going through Congress. Speaking at a National Press Club event Wednesday morning, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said the administration had “identified a number of executive actions” that the president is willing to implement after the House failed for more than a year to push comprehensive immigration reform through.
“I am satisfied that our reforms are within our existing legal authorities and they will address a number of things including border security,” Johnson said. “The president is committed to border security. The president is committed to reducing illegal migration in the future. And so we will be announcing a set of comprehensive reforms, all within our existing legal authority to fix the broken immigration system.”
Nearly half of Americans surveyed in the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll said they did not approve of the president’s proposals. Roughly 48% oppose of the executive action, while 38% approve it. But the results are divided on largely partisan lines, NBC News reports. While 63% of Democrats say they support the president’s move, only 11% of Republicans say the same.
The details of the president’s plan will be unveiled in a prime-time address, which White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest defended as part of strategy to “talk to as many Americans as possible.”
“The intended audience for this message is the American people,” Earnest said. He repeatedly dismissed questions during a White House briefing about whether an executive order could invite a host of legal problems for the president. While he was unwilling to get into how the actions would be implemented, he said “there is a solid legal foundation for the president to take these actions.”
The high school where the president is expected to rally support behind his immigration plan — Del Sol High School in Las Vegas — is symbolic in marking where Obama launched his push for a legislative solution to overhaul U.S. immigration laws.








