Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Republican Party Seeks Answer To Obama On Immigration

The Canadian Press , 22 Nov, 2014 02:10 AM
    WASHINGTON - Sputtering with indignation, the Republican party promises there will be consequences for U.S. President Barack Obama's sweeping, unilateral move on immigration.
     
    The question is: How far can it go?
     
    Immigration might be the single biggest source of strain between two powerful factions of the Republican coalition — the big-business wing and the conservative grassroots.
     
    Handled poorly, the issue could split the party. Any move too far to one side risks turning off the other.
     
    So Republicans are seeking a response that lies between shutdown and climbdown — an option that falls on a continuum somewhere between stalling the federal government and completely capitulating to the commander-in-chief.
     
    One day after Obama offered a three-year stay to nearly five million undocumented immigrants, Republicans hadn't quite figured out their next move.
     
    "We're working with our members and looking at the options that are available to us," John Boehner, the top Republican in the House, said Friday.
     
    "But I will say to you that the House will, in fact, act."
     
    Easier said than done.
     
    The range of potential responses is as vast as the variety of views on immigration policy in the Republican caucus, where some members want all-out political war with Obama and others share his views on immigration.
     
    In fact, a Pew Center study this year found a far bigger cleavage on that issue than other major ones that split the party's main factions — including gay rights, military intervention, and the role of Wall Street.
     
    The study found a whopping 52-per-cent divergence in response to the statement, "Immigrants today are a burden because they take jobs, housing, health care." A mere 21 per cent of self-described "business conservatives" agreed with that statement — compared with 73 per cent of "steadfast conservatives."
     
     
    One thing that unites them is disdain for the president.
     
    They've managed to rally around the idea that he overstepped his authority this week. They say Obama had no constitutional right to promise parents of U.S. citizens that they could register to stay in the country, and work, for three years.
     
    Even Jeb Bush, a potential centrist candidate for the presidency in 2016 and the softest of the Republican softies on immigration, posted a Facebook statement denouncing Obama's announcement as an "ill-advised unilateral action."
     
    Many of the comments below it contained too many naughty words to print — from Republican voters, directed at Bush. Some of the conservatives commenting on Bush's Facebook page wanted more: they wanted to impeach Obama.
     
    That's the kind of anger in the ranks that Boehner and company will be contending with over the next few weeks as they prepare a response for the new Congress after the holidays.
     
    The brass will be getting pushed by more hawkish members like Sen. Ted Cruz, who penned an op-ed Friday that laid out two preferred responses. One, stop confirming all of Obama's appointments to the courts, executive agencies, and embassies until he backs down; Two, stick an anti-deferral clause into every spending bill and dare Obama to shut down the government.
     
    "If he acts by executive diktat, President Obama will not be acting as a president, he will be acting as a monarch," Cruz wrote in Politico.
     
    "Thankfully, the framers of our Constitution, wary of the dangers of monarchy, gave the Congress tools to rein in abuses of power. They believed if the president wants to change the law, he cannot act alone; he must work with Congress."
     
    The pulse of the party could be heard on right-wing radio.
     
    One host, Mark Levin, was comparing the president to a fascist, calling him "Benito Obama." Rush Limbaugh sounded incredulous Friday that the party brass was trying to calm the base, instead of fighting the president.
     
    Another potential 2016 candidate suggested a long-term legal strategy.
     
    Sen. Rand Paul said Congress should start by immediately passing a non-binding resolution — one that simply states that Obama's action is contrary to the will of the elected body.
     
    That's because the Supreme Court decided over a half-century ago that executive actions by presidents are limited, and can be struck down in court if they're found to contradict the clear will of Congress.
     
    "What I would recommend to the House is, they should immediately pass at least a resolution saying that what he is doing is contrary to the will of the House of Representatives," Paul said on Fox News.
     
    "History will treat him unkindly on this if he thinks he can become king."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ceremony Honours 4 Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff Near Victoria

    Ceremony Honours 4 Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff Near Victoria
    VICTORIA — Four airmen have been laid to rest at a military service in Victoria — more than 70 years after they disappeared in their aircraft.

    Ceremony Honours 4 Airmen Whose Bodies Found Decades After Takeoff Near Victoria

    Brampton, Ontario, Has Most Unaffordable Daycare

    Brampton, Ontario, Has Most Unaffordable Daycare
    A city west of Toronto has been named the least affordable place in Canada for regulated daycare. The study, titled The Parent Trap and released by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, says childcare rates in Brampton, Ont., are the most disproportionate in the country.

    Brampton, Ontario, Has Most Unaffordable Daycare

    Pipeline Issues Are Scabs On People's Lives: Rocker Neil Young In Vancouver

    Pipeline Issues Are Scabs On People's Lives: Rocker Neil Young In Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — Music icon Neil Young says Canadians need to stand up for clean air, land and water by taking on big oil companies in particular.

    Pipeline Issues Are Scabs On People's Lives: Rocker Neil Young In Vancouver

    Declare those who died serving Canada in world wars Canadian citizens: petition

    Declare those who died serving Canada in world wars Canadian citizens: petition
    VANCOUVER — When tribute is paid on Remembrance Day to the soldiers, sailors and flyers killed in the service of Canada during two world wars, Canadians also need to think about citizenship, say two advocacy groups.

    Declare those who died serving Canada in world wars Canadian citizens: petition

    Eaton Centre shooting trial hears from girlfriend of accused

    Eaton Centre shooting trial hears from girlfriend of accused
    TORONTO — The girlfriend of a man who killed two people when he opened fire at Toronto's Eaton Centre says he told her he got himself into "some trouble" and was "going away for a really long time."

    Eaton Centre shooting trial hears from girlfriend of accused

    New book offers insider insights into some of Canada's most notorious crimes

    New book offers insider insights into some of Canada's most notorious crimes
    TORONTO — From the notorious rape and murder of two Ontario school girls to the notorious wrongful conviction of Thomas Sophonow in Manitoba, from the grisly to the tragic to the weird, Canada has thrown up its share of riveting, horrific and even bizarre criminal cases.

    New book offers insider insights into some of Canada's most notorious crimes