Nah I doubt it. He can no longer run on trying to do something about immigration but being blocked by dems/Obama. Instead his very idea has been hijacked and poisoned, and you best believe the base won't be happy.I can still see them picking him just to ride on the hype of picking a Hispanic for VP.
Certainly not, this just reeks of such a blatant grab. Why wasn't this done years ago? I'd imagine the administration kept it in the card deck because Hispanics support Obama in such big numbers, and likely figured they wouldn't care about the timing as compared to the benefit.
It'll be interesting to see how Hispanic commentators/news reports on this, and how Romney reacts. In some ways this is like Rubio's watered down Dream Act.
Nah I doubt it. He can no longer run on trying to do something about immigration but being blocked by dems/Obama. Instead his very idea has been hijacked and poisoned, and you best believe the base won't be happy.
If he runs for president, this will be his Romneycare
Nah I doubt it. He can no longer run on trying to do something about immigration but being blocked by dems/Obama. Instead his very idea has been hijacked and poisoned, and you best believe the base won't be happy.
If he runs for president, this will be his Romneycare
Rubio has not opposed this move outright - he has simply said it prevents a long term solution.
Rubio has not opposed this move outright - he has simply said it prevents a long term solution.
"while Republicans reacted with outrage that the move amounts to amnesty -- a negative buzz word among conservatives." -CNN
Man, how fast the conservatives abandoned George's plans.
They're also ignoring that there's actually only a two year deferral on deportation. So it's not actual amnesty in any sense of the word.
The problem is that Obama attatched his name to what is essentially Rubio's plan, thus making it toxic to the base. This is essentially what I called for last month in terms of killing his plan with kindness.
So far the republican response has been to dismiss this as political, but the actual base isn't happy and eventually the more fringe law makers will make ridiculous comments on it. So while Rubi may no be opposed, the good will he gained among republican law makers on the issue has disappeared, and the base ain't happy
Check out Drudge's front page.
The problem is that Obama attatched his name to what is essentially Rubio's plan, thus making it toxic to the base. This is essentially what I called for last month in terms of killing his plan with kindness.
So far the republican response has been to dismiss this as political, but the actual base isn't happy and eventually the more fringe law makers will make ridiculous comments on it. So while Rubi may no be opposed, the good will he gained among republican law makers on the issue has disappeared, and the base ain't happy
There are a lot of things GWB did that conservatives retroactively were opposed to.
June surprise!
So let's look at Obama's conservative record:
1. endorses tax cuts as a way to grow the economy
2. endorses budget cutting as a way to grow the economy
3. adopts and expands Republican Mitt Romney's health care plan / mandates
4. adopts and expands Bush/Cheney's Drone Program
5. adopts and expands Off-Shore Oil Drilling
6. adopts and expands Bush illegal immigrant deportation program
7. adopts and expands the war on drugs
8. adopts Marco Rubio's DREAM act
Not sure what I'm forgetting, but all of these aren't coincidences, and most of them run counter to liberalism, progressivism, and the general Democratic platform. It's pretty clear Obama has, as a strategy, adopted pretty much all the reasonable GOP "ideas," even at a dear economic cost.
Guessing this is the 20-year, 11th Dimensional Chess or w/e it's called, permanent majority strategy. Republicans look so fucking stupid ranting against everything they in which they were previously supportive.
Now, if I had ever seen John Kerry and Obama in the same room together, I might think this was some devious payback for making him look weak. But it's probably just the result of a somewhat sane, right-leaning centrist that happens to be a Democratic President. (hehe)
Yeah I was thinking the same thing.Check out Drudge's front page. It says this tracks closely to Rubio's plan. I don't normally give Obama props but this is brilliant. Not only is it good policy that helps Hispanics, it destroys Rubio's brand; he crrtainly can't be VP as the "blueprint" of this. Two birds with one stone
Want some fun? Tune in to CSPAN and listen to the callers.
1 is completely untenable, at odds with everything the GOP has done the last four+ years.
But I'd say a stripped-down 2. Hammer on this being an authoritarian, anti-democracy move, how this is the sort of thing Congress should be doing, etc, etc. No need to touch too much on the actual immigration stuff.
This was a doubly clever move by the Obama administration. Over and above the obvious appeal to a key constituency, the policy here mimics, I assume intentionally, what Republicans claim they want to adopt in a scaled-down version of the DREAM Act. But for Republicans, embracing Obamas move carries the same risk with their base as rejecting it does with immigrants the voting bloc theyre most concerned about alienating.
A hunch: prepare yourself for a deluge of condemnations of executive-branch overreach, paired with real reluctance to say anything meaningful about what the directive actually accomplishes.
I don't like how we aren't following the constitution. And as long as were part of the United States I think we should follow it.
the 10th amendment says anything that isn't int he constitution should be left up to the states.
I raelly don't see how I'm anti-american. Mitt ROmney may have past a health care law, but he did it only to massachussets.
I'm also curious how white voters will respond to this. There could be an opening here for Romney in terms of arguing Obama has a jobs plan for illegal immigrants but no plan for actual Americans (note: I know Obama has a jobs plan). Given the state of the economy, resentment politics could work here.
1 is completely untenable, at odds with everything the GOP has done the last four+ years.
But I'd say a stripped-down 2. Hammer on this being an authoritarian, anti-democracy move, how this is the sort of thing Congress should be doing, etc, etc. No need to touch too much on the actual immigration stuff.
Steven King plans to sue over this
http://livewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/entries/steve-king-ill-sue-over-new-obama-immigration
bring it on
I am not opposed to the effect of this, but can anyone supporting the President's decision point me to where he has this sort of unilateral authority?
I am not opposed to the effect of this, but can anyone supporting the President's decision point me to where he has this sort of unilateral authority?
Eh? The executive branch controls the deportation process. The administration is essentially just refusing to deport certain immigrants that meet certain criteria. I don't see how that's a breach of anything, and would be interested in your evidence to the contrary
Ah Ok, I missed what the mechanism was - I was thinking it was an Executive Order. So I guess there is then the question of if the President is ignoring his oath to uphold the Constitution.
Obama down to 44% in today's Gallup. Wheeee.
And this is when it does start to matter...
Didn't you just say two days ago that it was only June? Because it still is...
Didn't you just say two days ago that it was only June? Because it still is...
Ah Ok, I missed what the mechanism was - I was thinking it was an Executive Order. So I guess there is then the question of if the President is ignoring his oath to uphold the Constitution.
Precisely. They'll attempt to obfuscate by decrying executive overreach rather than engaging the issue substantively.1 is completely untenable, at odds with everything the GOP has done the last four+ years.
But I'd say a stripped-down 2. Hammer on this being an authoritarian, anti-democracy move, how this is the sort of thing Congress should be doing, etc, etc. No need to touch too much on the actual immigration stuff.
Labeling yesterday's events a coup is a bit of a misnomer. I understand the disparate opposition has labeled it a coup. But that that's principally a ploy to maintain the moral imperative and public support. Effectively, the SCAF had not relinquished control. And they are clearly the premier political institution. They reaffirmed their grasp on power. And I suspect the outcome of tomorrow's runoff will be felicitous for them. Further, this demonstrates why the military, not the MB or Islamism, remains the largest impediment to a democratic transition as I've previously noted.So..Egypt just witnessed the most silent and smoothest coup d'etat today. Supreme council court declares Parliament invalid, SCAF says it will command total legislative authority, dissolve the parliament and create a new legislative assembly. That historic election couple of weeks ago? lol
And Mitt Romney didn't say anything about Obama's decision during his rally.
And Mitt Romney didn't say anything about Obama's decision during his rally.
Thats probably the best play for him, simply avoid talking about it and hope it goes away. If he supports it, his base will be pissed and might appear 'weak' (i think the last bit is stupid pundit talk). If he comes out against it, he might lose independents and Hispanics
He's doing his first non-Fox TV interview of the general campaign on sunday (CBS). Best believe he'll be asked about it and have to give an answer
Yeah. His rebuke was justified. If I were impudently interrupted, I'd respond likewise.have not seen Obama that visibly angry in a long, long time. and rightfully so - incredibly inappropriate to interrupt the president during a rose garden statement. of course it would be a reporter from the daily caller.
The guy interviewing him is the same person who claimed Obama has been largely running negative ads.