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Why Obama may punt on executive action on immigration, even after the election

President Obama has backed down on this issue in the past and, if Republicans win the Senate, a plausible case can be made that immigration reform is not important enough an issue to tie up operations of government.

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Jacquelyn Martin/AP/File
President Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, pauses while making a statement about immigration reform in the Rose Garden of the White House on June 30, 2014. The president, who has postponed until after Election Day his plan for executive actions that could shield millions of immigrants from deportation, is already on pace this year to deport the fewest number of immigrants since at least 2007.

When the summer began, President Obama had said that he was directing his advisers to聽聽that would not require the approval of Congress. This step had been聽聽having been hinted about by administration officials, and was believed to include consideration of measures such as expanding the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that the president had announced two years earlier. As the summer wore on, though, reports circulated that many Democrats running for reelection in red states were聽聽for fear that anything announced before then would doom their campaigns. Last month, President Obama did in fact聽, an action for which he received a lot of criticism from Latino organizations and immigration rights groups, Since that announcement, 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. Matt Yglesias, though, seems pretty convinced that

President Barack Obama聽聽that after the midterm election he鈥檚 going to use his executive authority to create a fairly broad聽de facto聽amnesty program for many undocumented migrants living in the United States.

I鈥檓 just not sure I believe him.

Not that I doubt the president鈥檚 sincerity. I haven鈥檛 gazed into his soul on the subject, but the best read I have on White House officials is that they genuinely believe that they are going to do this. I just think they may be mistaken about their own likely behavior. Especially if Republicans take the Senate 鈥撀犅犫 it鈥檚 easy for me to imagine that they will look around at the new November landscape and have a change of heart.

(鈥)

Even if Republicans take the Senate, they still can鈥檛聽stop Obama from following through on his promise. But聽, if the GOP takes the Senate they鈥檒l be position 鈥渢o place 鈥榚xecutive amnesty鈥 at the center of proximate fights over funding the government and increasing the debt limit.鈥 And the basic dynamic where Democratic Senators from states with low Latino populations aren鈥檛 eager to have a huge throwdown over the issue would remain in place. The odds of the White House losing its nerve as part of a strategy to hold the party together in sure-to-be-grueling battles with congressional Republicans seem high.

Further reducing the odds that Obama will plow ahead in the face of a bad election result is the relative silence of Hillary Clinton on the issue. If Democrats were having a normal 2016 presidential primary, you鈥檇 expect to see leading contenders out there making statements about their hope that the president will deliver for immigrants. But Clinton, not facing any robust opposition, is so far mostly聽聽and talking about the need to 鈥渆lect more Democrats.鈥 If activists don鈥檛 have the leverage to get a clear statement of support out of a presidential candidate, it seems unlikely that they really have the muscle to force the White House to act if the political climate is unfavorable.

Such a move would, of course, be incredibly disappointing to Latino voters and immigration activists, and with the 2016 election approaching soon after the midterms, it seems inconceivable, at first glance, that the president would throw this group of voters completely under the bus after having dangled the promise of some kind of action in front of them for the better part of a year. If nothing else, such a move would risk damaging Democratic Party fortunes going forward 鈥 not so much because these voters would suddenly switch loyalty to the GOP, but because they would be likely to just stay home on Election Day and become less active in campaigns. This would do as much harm to the party鈥檚 fortunes as voting for the opposing party, if not more. Looking at this purely from the perspective of partisan politics, then, it seems inconceivable that the president would do something that would clearly be seen as a slap in the face to an important and growing constituency, and an important part of the Democratic coalition.

That being said, I believe that Yglesias is on to something when he argues that a Republican victory in November is likely to spook the president into either scaling back the executive action that was planned to make it much more modest than it might otherwise have been, or to put it off altogether in favor of another push for immigration reform in the 114th Congress, which will likely not go anywhere. As he notes, in the context of a Congress fully controlled by Republicans, there will be tremendous pressure to delay action in order to get things like budgeting and other tasks needed to keep the government functioning. Even some Democrats are likely to be less than enthusiastic about the idea given the electoral price they could pay in the future. Finally, there鈥檚 the simple fact that President Obama has backed down on this issue in the past, and that a plausible case can be made that immigration reform is not important enough an issue to tie up the federal budget or other operations of government.

So, if the GOP does win the Senate, don鈥檛 be too surprised if we don鈥檛 see any executive action at all or, if we do, that it is substantially more modest than previously hinted at.

Doug Mataconis appears on the Outside the Beltway blog at http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/.

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