House Republicans are moving forward with a bill to prevent President Obama from protecting immigrants from deportation, insisting that he accept the measure as the price of funding the Department of Homeland Security.
“Essentially what it says is the president cannot fund an activity that is unconstitutional and illegal,” GOP Rep. Pete Sessions of Texas, who chairs the House Rules Committee, told reporters.
Obama announced in November that he would move to temporarily defer deportations for up to 5 million qualifying undocumented immigrants and allow them to work in the country legally. The House, already trending away from immigration reform and towards calls for more deportations, responded in December by passing a bill blocking the move only to see it die in the Senate. Speaker John Boehner assured conservatives at the time that he would renew the fight once the GOP took control of the Senate and pledged Thursday to challenge the president’s immigration order “tooth and nail.”
The new iteration would not only block the new program, but stop new applications for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), which grants relief to undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. as children, and reverse a 2011 memo ordering immigration authorities to prioritize deporting criminals.
“Only three words describe the Republican approach to immigrants: deportation, deportation, deportation,” Democratic Rep. Luis Gutierrez of Illinois said in a statement.
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