When President Obama used his executive authority to protect millions of undocumented immigrants, he acknowledged that his plan would stir both “passion and controversy.”
Little did he know how intense the response would be.
“Obviously I’m frustrated,” Obama said during a news conference Monday, pointing to a legal challenge pending in federal court.
In the seven months since his prime time address to the nation on immigration reform, lawsuits and incremental blunders have stacked up to thwart implementation of an ambitious plan that was to be a cornerstone of Obama’s legacy.
Some setbacks have been the result of legal challenges awaiting decisions in federal court. Partisan opposition has been fierce. But other obstacles were the result of the administration’s own roll-out, calculations and responses to those pending cases.
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“We are being as aggressive as we can legally to first and foremost appeal that ruling and then to implement those elements of immigration executive action that were not challenged in court,” the president said.
It is likely that the millions of undocumented immigrants that would benefit from the measures will have to wait until summer of 2016 before the courts decide their fate, pushing the program back into the waning days of Obama’s second term.
Appearing visibly disappointed, Obama insisted during a summit of world leaders in Germany that he was convinced his programs were lawful.
He faulted a “short-sighted approach” by Republicans for stymying comprehensive reform in Congress, an issue that will likely hang over the 2016 presidential election.
For the millions of people the president encouraged to “come out of the shadows,” in November 2014, the price has been steep and there is little relief in sight.
The two executive programs — known as Deferred Action for Parental Accountability (DAPA) and an expansion to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) — were designed to protect the parents of American citizens and so-called “DREAMers” brought to the U.S. as young children. All told, more than 4 million undocumented immigrants would have been protected from deportation and allowed to temporarily live in the United States.
Just three months after Obama signed the orders, a federal court ruling in Texas stopped the plan in its track. Since then, qualifying immigrants have been in limbo despite the fact that hundreds of legal analysts, elected officials and immigration experts remain confident that the administration will ultimately prevail.
That confidence may have actually hurt the plan from the get-go. Early on, immigration officials prematurely issued benefits under the new executive measures to thousands of undocumented immigrants before the programs were scheduled to launch. That oversight infuriated District Court Judge Andrew Hanen to the point that he threatened sanctions against the federal government.
Hanen blocked the programs even before they started, hanging his decision on a minor procedural detail that some legal experts say the administration could have not only avoided, but can still correct. Because the case was brought jointly by Texas and 25 other states, it virtually crippled implementation on a national scale.
When Obama defended the government’s position during a town hall meeting with msnbc in February, he used the same words he relied on Monday, promising to be “as aggressive as we can” at each stage of the legal process.
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But after a string of defeats in two separate courts, the administration is momentarily pumping the breaks.
Federal officials were prepared to begin implementing the programs in two phases, with the first portion launching in mid-February, followed by a second wave in May. Instead, plans for the 280,000-square-foot building leased to for the program and thousands of new-hires to review applications are now on hold.
Any chance that the federal government would begin accepting applications for the executive programs in the near future was abandoned last week after the Justice Department quietly announced that it will not ask the Supreme Court to intervene at this stage.
That move was seen by many as a failure by the Justice Department to get the preliminary injunction on the programs lifted. Others claim it was a strategic retreat designed to allow lawyers for the administration time to prepare arguments for July at the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which is notoriously conservative.
“They should pull out all the stops, but they’re making a judgment call that it will be a waste of time and effort on something they’re not going to win,” said Daniel Costa, director of immigration law and policy research at the Economic Policy Institute.








