In immigration news: Uncertainty over executive action, the fate of migrant kids, long-distance immigration hearings …

Why Obama may punt on executive action on immigration, even after the election - Christian Science Monitor Last month, President Obama indicated there would be some sort of executive action on immigration after midterm elections. Since then, "the underlying assumption has been that we would indeed see some kind of action from the president after the election, perhaps during the lame-duck period before the new Congress takes office." But some pundits think that depending on the outcome, he may wait longer.

White House doubts shutdown fight over immigration reform - The Hill From the story: "The White House would be 'surprised' if congressional Republicans link efforts to block any forthcoming executive actions on immigration to future budget or debt ceiling measures, press secretary Josh Earnest said Wednesday. 'I don't think that there are many analysts that believe that the political standing of the Republican Party was enhanced by shutting down the government,' Earnest said."

For immigrant children, fate in U.S. a roll of the dice - CNN Whether or not recently-arrived migrant kids from Central America get to remain legally in the U.S. "largely hinges on two factors that often are beyond their control whether they have a lawyer and which of several dozen immigration judges nationwide happen to hear their case. Whether young immigrants get a lawyer often a matter of luck. And immigration judges often make wildly different decisions after weighing similar facts."

How a judge decides detained immigrants future from 1,700 miles away - Washington Post On the complications that arise as immigration hearings are conducted long-distance by video conference. From one Salvadoran family's hearing: "Immigration Judge QuynhBain keeps having to interrupt the witness to ask her to slow down her account of the night that some Mara-18 gang members ran her off the road in her hometown in El Salvador. 'Please remember,' the judge tells her through an interpreter, 'that one of us doesnt speak Spanish.'

Immigrant keeps suicide watch over fellow refugees from Bhutan - Los Angeles Times Since 2010, 33-year-old Som Subedi has attended to Portland's Bhutanese immigrants. From the story: "He meets them at the airport, giving them a $100 bill, telling them: 'Here, this is to get you started. But remember, money doesn't grow on trees.' He helps them find shelter and introduces them to other Bhutanese to alleviate the shock of a new homeland."

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