Obama immigration action: Is it about people, or process? (+video)

Washington To President Obama, the sweeping immigration overhaul he announced in a speech to the nation on Thursday night is focused on people. Its about helping the people who pick our fruit, build our bridges, and clean our houses come out from the shadows. Its about allowing mothers and fathers to stay with their children.

Are we a nation that accepts the cruelty of ripping children from their parents arms? Or are we a nation that values families and works to keep them together? Mr. Obama said in perhaps the most emotion-laden passage of his address.

To newly empowered Republicans, the attention of the nation should be focused on the president's process on immigration. Obama does not lawfully have the power to order changes to the extent that he did, in their view. Its an abuse of the governmental system established by the Founding Fathers that could set a dangerous precedent for presidents to come.

The president seems intent on provoking a constitutional crisis by adopting policies that he previously said were illegal, said Sen. John Cornyn (R) of Texas.

Its this juxtaposition people versus process that will define the coming political immigration war. And war it will be, rhetorically speaking. Obama has set off an explosion as the GOP readies to take control of both chambers of Congress in 2015 by doing something that infuriates them on an issue they warned him to leave be.

In part, that is because their party may be divided by the response. Establishment Republicans have tried to rule out using the congressional power of the purse to shut down the government in response to the immigration actions. But the conservative tea party wing of the GOP sees that as a lack of conviction, not prudence.

If the GOP really thought this were a constitutional crisis, they would act like it, writes conservative commentator Erick Erickson Friday on his personal blog.

Obamas announcement on Thursday was the culmination of months of emotional buildup in Washington on the immigration issue. In the end, his moves were slightly less sweeping than some had hoped, or feared.

As expected, the centerpiece was an order that the undocumented parents of children who are American citizens or have green cards are protected from deportation and eligible for green cards for at least three years. Under this provision, the children do not have to be minors, but the parents must pass a background check.

Obama also extended the deadline for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (DACA), which he launched in 2012. This program shields from deportation minors who were brought here illegally as children. Previously, the children in question had to have arrived in the United States prior to 2007; Obama on Thursday extended that to 2010.

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Obama immigration action: Is it about people, or process? (+video)

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