You can’t say they didn’t try.
Supporters of immigration reform did everything they could to pass a law. They threw their support behind bipartisan negotiations in the Senate that led to the passage of a promising bill. They organized religious leaders, CEOs, and law enforcement to lobby Republicans in their districts. They even managed to broker a peace deal between unions and corporations.
None of it worked. Amid a growing consensus House Republicans are unlikely to pass a bill anytime soon, lawmakers, activists, and the White House are moving on to a post-reform phase focused on immediate relief for undocumented immigrants and wreaking electoral vengeance on the GOP.
“I think we’re entering the last chapter of the push for legislation,” Frank Sharry, executive director of pro-reform advocacy group America’s Voice, told msnbc.
In Congress, Democrats filed a discharge petition on Wednesday to force a vote on HR 15, a comprehensive immigration reform bill largely adapted from the Senate’s bipartisan bill. As Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi herself admitted going in, the petition had almost no chance of success since it would require substantial Republican help to succeed. The move’s real value is political: by providing a clear route to passing reform, Democrats hope to force Republicans – especially a handful of members in immigrant-heavy swing districts – to clarify their position in starker terms.
“It says between now and November to the Republicans, ‘You don’t like the discharge petition, so what do you propose?’” Eliseo Medina, the SEIU’s point man on immigration, told msnbc. “They’re going to have to answer the question.”
The bigger action is on the executive side. Immigration leaders have long criticized President Obama for his record pace of deportations and called on him to issue an order broadly halting removals, especially in cases where families would be divided.
Obama and Democratic lawmakers working on reform were wary of such proposals last year, which Republicans warned would scuttle negotiations. As long as good faith talks continued the White House was able buy some breathing room on the issue. Now that hopes for a legitimate House GOP bill are fading, there’s little reason for pro-reform voices to temper their calls for immediate action. Even dealmakers like Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, who once downplayed talk of unilateral action, are calling on the president to bypass Congress if nothing happens soon.
“The clear reality is comprehensive immigration is dead this year,” Arturo Carmona, executive director of Presente.org, told msnbc. “We can’t continue to have this contradictory policy where President Obama on the one side is saying fix the broken immigration system while he continues to deport our families at unprecedented rates.”
Until recently, Obama said he lacked legal authority to make significant changes, but he opened the door to executive action just a crack in January – then swung it wide open in March. After meeting with Hispanic lawmakers, Obama directed his new Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson to review deportation policies in pursuit of a more humane approach.
Sharry and Medina told msnbc they came away from their own meeting with Obama encouraged that he would take steps to halt deportations for at least some groups. Both named June as their tentative deadline for GOP action, after which they assumed immigration reform was done for the year and activists would move on to their next steps. According to The Washington Post’s Greg Sargent, activists who spoke to the president believe the White House is on a similar timetable in determining new executive actions.
“My sense is that the president wants to give them every chance to do something, but if they wont do it I take him at his word during his State of the Union speech when he said ‘If Congress won’t act, I will,’” Medina said.









