Obama offering immigration plan as backup
by PHILIP ELLIOTT,Associated Press
Feb 18, 2013 | 4646 views | 126 126 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
FILE - In this Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks about immigration at Del Sol High School in Las Vegas. The White House is circulating a draft immigration bill that would create a new visa for illegal immigrants living in the United States and allow them to become legal permanent residents within eight years, according to a report published online Saturday, Feb. 16, 2013 by USA Today. President Barack Obama's bill would create a "Lawful Prospective Immigrant" visa for the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants living in the United States.(AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)
FILE - In this Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks about immigration at Del Sol High School in Las Vegas. The White House is circulating a draft immigration bill that would create a new visa for illegal immigrants living in the United States and allow them to become legal permanent residents within eight years, according to a report published online Saturday, Feb. 16, 2013 by USA Today. President Barack Obama's bill would create a "Lawful Prospective Immigrant" visa for the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants living in the United States.(AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House is downplaying its draft immigration proposal as merely a backup plan if lawmakers don't come up with an overhaul of their own. It won't be necessary, Republican and Democratic lawmakers alike are telling the Obama administration.

White House chief of staff Denis McDonough said Sunday that President Barack Obama wants to "be prepared" in case the small bipartisan group of senators fails to devise a plan for the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants in the United States. In response, lawmakers assured the White House they are working on their own plan — and warned that Obama would be heading toward failure if the White House gets ahead of them.

"We will be prepared with our own plan if these ongoing talks between Republicans and Democrats up on Capitol Hill break down," McDonough said, adding he's optimistic they would not crumble.

But he was equally realistic about the fierce partisanship on Capitol Hill.

"Well, let's make sure that it doesn't have to be proposed," McDonough said of the president's pitch, first reported on USA Today's website late Saturday.

Even so, the administration is moving forward on its own immigration agenda should one of Obama's top priorities get derailed.

The administration's proposal would create a visa for those in the country illegally and allow them to become legal permanent residents within eight years. The proposal also requires businesses to know the immigration status of their workers and adds more funding for border security.

It drew immediate criticism from Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., one of the eight lawmakers searching for a comprehensive plan.

"If actually proposed, the president's bill would be dead on arrival in Congress, leaving us with unsecured borders and a broken legal immigration system for years to come," said Rubio, who has been a leading GOP spokesman on immigration.

Many of the details in the administration's draft proposal follow the broad principles that Obama previously outlined. But the fact the administration is writing its own alternative signaled Obama wants to address immigration sooner rather than later and perhaps was looking to nudge lawmakers to move more quickly.

The tactic could complicate the administration's work with Congress.

David Axelrod, who was a senior adviser to Obama's re-election campaign, acknowledged Monday that it likely was a mistake for news of the Obama immigration plan to be made public.

Appearing on MSNBC, Axelrod said in an interview from Chicago that "the mistake here was to disseminate it so widely within the administration" and said he believes that White House officials would "take it back" if they could.

Republican Rep. Paul Ryan, the Wisconsin lawmaker who was his party's vice presidential nominee last year, said the timing of the leak suggests the White House was looking for "a partisan advantage and not a bipartisan solution."

"Leaking this out does set things in the wrong direction," said Ryan. "There are groups in the House and the Senate working together to get this done and when he does things like this, it makes that much more difficult to do that."

Freshman Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, called the leaked plan "incomplete" and said both parties in Congress and the White House need to work together on a solution.

"It hasn't happened yet. It will happen before something is acted upon and certainly before something is passed," he said.

Republican Sen. John McCain predicted the administration's efforts would come up short if the White House went forward with a proposal, and he encouraged the White House to give senators a chance to finish their work.

McCain, the Arizona senator whose previous efforts at an immigration overhaul ended in failure in 2007, predicted the White House proposal's demise if it were sent to Congress. He strongly urged the president to pocket the drafted measures.

"I believe we are making progress in a bipartisan basis," said McCain, who is in the Senate group working on legislation.

And Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer, who met with Obama on Wednesday at the White House to discuss progress, urged his allies in the administration to give a bipartisan group of eight lawmakers the time to hammer out a deal on their own.

Schumer, a New York Democrat and a close ally of the White House, said he has not seen the draft proposals but, along with the Democrats working on a compromise, met with Obama this week to talk about progress being made on Capitol Hill.

Schumer acknowledged that a single-party proposal would have a much more difficult time becoming law and urged the bipartisan group of senators to keep meeting to find common ground.

"I am very hopeful that in March we will have a bipartisan bill," Schumer said. "And, you know, it's obvious if a Democrat — the president or anyone else — puts out what they want on their own, (it) is going to be different than when you have a bipartisan agreement. But the only way we're going to get something done is with a bipartisan agreement."

McDonough appeared on ABC's "This Week," NBC's "Meet the Press" and CBS' "Face the Nation." Ryan and Castro spoke to "This Week." McCain spoke to "Meet the Press." Schumer appeared on CNN's "State of the Union."
Comments
(126)
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rt_elms
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March 08, 2013
Perplexed by the King’s English or plebe for party of No?

FYI: We all come from the same oven broken and in need.

Termlimits
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March 08, 2013
NO.

Termlimits from Caldonia - "What makes your big head so hard? Huh!"

rt_elms
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March 08, 2013
“Would the fountain of your mind were clear again, that I might water an as# at it.”

Shakespeare from Troilus and Cressida

Termlimits
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March 08, 2013
I'm bored. you win. Again.

Perhaps we can agree: Everyone is kneaded out of the same dough but not baked in the same oven
Termlimits
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March 08, 2013
World's biggest donkey lives in Waxahachie, Texas. Romulus is no match for ours, no sir.
rt_elms
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March 08, 2013
I almost forgot. It’s Furious Liberal Friday!

Liberal Logic 101 – Conservatives hate women. They are unable to express compassion and understanding towards women the way Democrats like Bill Clinton and Teddy Kennedy have.

Well, which is it TL, hypocrite or pervert?

Termlimits
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March 08, 2013
Squire Sancho Christie called looking for a ride, Hole. One caveat: Poll shows that Christie is strongest Republican but that Hillary would ride him like a horse in a match-up.

rt_elms
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March 08, 2013
Careful there TL, the collective may notice your slip showing, as auctions are an evil tool of Capitalism.
Termlimits
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March 08, 2013
For auction today we have a standard, grumpy, Republican Equus africanus asinus [Unk: Jack, Jenny, other]. Named “Hole”; it brays daily on the intellectual collapse and eagerly circles the wagon around the White House. I hear $0.02...going once...going twice.
rt_elms
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March 08, 2013
I’m guessing hypocrite, but I could be wrong (!)
Termlimits
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March 08, 2013
Now me donkey gone mad they say

Lordy let him bray, let him bray.

It never rose and it never flew.
rt_elms
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March 08, 2013
Though I’m often counseled not to suffer fools, I must say, better to be the “donkey” than the donkey-orifice like you.

The question stands: are you a hypocrite or pervert?
Termlimits
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March 07, 2013
Nice saddle.

rt_elms
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March 07, 2013
TL - Much better men have called me much worse and yet I remain. I would say just speak your mind, but then you'd be speechless.

CA and TL can’t (more likely won’t) answer the simple question because of the logical conundrum it puts them in. An answer in the affirmative exposes their duplicity in approving one perverted behavior over another. A negative reply perhaps is just too icky for even some progressive-liberals. So sad! Where is your compassion and understanding?

Termlimits
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March 07, 2013
If one man calls you a donkey, think about it. If two men call you a donkey, buy a saddle.

rt_elms
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March 07, 2013
TL – is calling me a Republican the best that dark heart of yours can manage? Do you need to borrow my copy of Alinsky for a refresher?

Both TL and CA, as any righteous-compassionate-understanding-progressive-liberals would, openly advocate for same-sex marriage. My very simple question stands: Would either of you caring souls go on record as being against bestiality and incest?

Termlimits
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March 06, 2013
No doubt. March madness number 1 seed.

rt is the voice of reason in the Republican Party. I know. I'm scared, too
rt_elms
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March 06, 2013
Lies CA? I give you Yale University’s official news outlet as a reference:

http://yaledailynews.com/blog/2013/03/04/sex-weekend-examines-sexual-culture/

Here’s another from an adjunct source:

http://www.campusreform.org/blog/?ID=4646

As to the promoter and leader of the event, her name is Dr. Jill McDevitt. You’ll have to look her up, as I would not sully my IP address by visiting her site.

If you’re bent out of shape by the bit of artistic license that ended my post, you and TL have never said anything that would make that statement unbelievable. Would both of you care to now go on record as being against bestiality and incest?

CuriouslyAbsent
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March 06, 2013
Wow, rt is getting pretty desperate if there's nothing but outright lies coming from his mouth. Jesus would surely be proud.
rt_elms
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March 05, 2013
Yale University holds a workshop with the expressed goals of encouraging “compassion and understanding for bestiality and incest.” The slow creep begun by the progressive liberal advocates of same-sex marriage has opened the gates for all unnatural sexual practices as predicted. CA and TL reportedly breathless with glee, yet complain ‘what took so long?’
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