(
Townhall) Desperately flailing in his bid for re-election, the President hopes to
sway votes in the Latino community (especially in states he needs like
New Mexico and Colorado) by coming up with a
half-baked extralegal plan
that -- depending on how one looks at it -- is either nothing at all,
or else constitutes a big impediment to reaching a permanent,
legislative solution on how to address the illegal immigration crisis in
this country.
How is the
plan nothing at all? Well, how many young people under 30 who meet all
the criteria set out by the President yesterday are actually being
pursued and deported? I would wager not many.
And
so now, the President is willing to give them work permits. That might
mean a little more if unemployment among young people weren't at
historically high levels -- approximately
16% among those 25 and under.
Now,
he's simply creating more competition in an already suffering cohort of
the labor market . . . after having failed to demonstrate the
leadership to spearhead a serious, meaningful immigration reform bill
despite having had two years of an overwhelming Democrat majority in
which he could have done so (and during a term in which he
has broken repeated promises to do so; apparently, the pledge to get on it first thing next term wasn't enough! ). Instead, he pursued massively unpopular ObamaCare.
On the other hand, how is the plan an impediment? As this LA Times story makes clear,
the President's idea came in response to pleas from Democrat senators
-- who realized that Republican Marco Rubio was putting together a real
legislative solution that could address the crisis. Having him do so
was a political nightmare for the Democrats, who are hoping to cement
the Latino vote by handing out tokens like this one while accusing the
Republicans of being anti-Latino.
Thus,
rather than working with Rubio to hammer out legislation that would
have addressed the problem in a serious, permanent way -- and truly
benefited Latinos -- the President chose instead the path that would
benefit himself and his allies politically. It also helps to poison the
water for any real and lasting reform, to the detriment of those who
need it most.
(Of course, this analysis sets aside the President's unconscionable arrogation of power that he
himself has acknowledged is not his to take -- a shameful and desperate move inimical to the long-term health of our republic and its separation of powers.)
Let
us hope that Latinos understand that the President has done little to
advance their real long-term interests -- that, in fact, he has been
hoping to hoodwink them, and willing to make them pawns to further his
own electoral prospects at their ultimate expense.
The
contrast is striking: President Reagan believed there was no limit to
what could be achieved if you don't care who gets the credit. President
Obama doesn't care if
anything is achieved so long as he can claim whatever credit there is.