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Presidents Ronald Reagan, above, and George H.W. Bush acted unilaterally on immigration in the wake of a sweeping, bipartisan overhaul. President Barack Presidents Ronald Reagan, above, and George H.W. Bush acted unilaterally on immigration in the wake of a sweeping, bipartisan overhaul. President Barack Obama, however, is acting as the country — and Washington — are bitterly divided over immigration.
WASHINGTON — Two presidents have acted unilaterally on immigration — and both were Republican. Ronald Reagan and his successor George H.W. Bush extended amnesty to family members who were not covered by the last major overhaul of immigration law in 1986.
Neither faced the political uproar widely anticipated if and when President Barack Obama uses his executive authority to protect millions of immigrants from deportation.
Reagan's and Bush's actions were conducted in the wake of a sweeping, bipartisan immigration overhaul and at a time when "amnesty" was not a dirty word. Their actions were less controversial because there was a consensus in Washington that the 1986 law needed a few fixes and Congress was poised to act on them. Obama is acting as the country — and Washington — are bitterly divided over a broken immigration system and what to do about 11 million people living in the U.S. illegally.
President George H.W. Bush.
President George H.W. Bush. (Associated Press file photo)
A Tea Party-influenced GOP is poised to erupt, if and when Obama follows through on his promise.
"The audacity of this president to think he can completely destroy the rule of law with the stroke of a pen is unfathomable to me," said GOP Rep. Steve King of Iowa, an outspoken opponent of relaxing U.S. immigration law. "It is unconstitutional, it is cynical, and it violates the will of the American people."
Some Republicans have even raised the possibility of impeachment.
Here's a timeline of then and now:
• 1986: Congress and Reagan enacted a sweeping overhaul that gave legal status to up to 3 million immigrants without authorization to be in the country, if they had come to the U.S. before 1982. Spouses and children who could not meet that test did not qualify, which incited protests that the new law was breaking up families.
• 1987: Early efforts in Congress to amend the law to cover family members failed. Reagan's Immigration and Naturalization Service commissioner announced that minor children of parents granted amnesty by the law would get protection from deportation. Spouses and children of couples in which one parent qualified for amnesty but the other did not remained subject to deportation, leading to efforts to amend the 1986 law.
• 1989: By a sweeping 81-17 vote, the Senate in July voted to prohibit deportations of family members of immigrants covered by the 1986 law. The House failed to act.
• 1990: In February, President George H.W. Bush, acting through the Immigration and Naturalization Service, established a "family fairness" in which family members living with a legalizing immigrant and who were in the U.S. before passage of the 1986 law were granted protection from deportation and authorized to seek employment. The administration estimated up to 1.5 million people would be covered by the policy. Congress in October passed a broader immigration law that made the protections permanent.
• 2012: In July, the Obama administration announces a new policy curbing deportations for certain immigrants brought illegally to the country as kids. The policy, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, applies to people younger than 30 who were brought to the U.S. before they turned 16 and meet other criteria such as graduating from high school. It has now granted two-year deportation reprieves and work permits to nearly 600,000 people.
• 2013-14 (Congress): After months of work, the Senate in June 2013 passes a huge immigration overhaul bill that includes a path to citizenship for immigrants who meet strict criteria. The House fails to act. Obama says expanding the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program to cover the parents of children allowed to remain in the country under the program "would be ignoring the law in a way that I think would be very difficult to defend legally. So that's not an option."
• 2014: Frustrated by Congress' inability to act on immigration, Obama announces in June that he'll use executive powers to address other elements of the flawed immigration system. Like Bush, Obama is expected to extend deportation protections to families of U.S. citizens or permanent residents.
Author: See this article at: http://www.denverpost.com/nationworld/ci_26957246/reagan-bush-acted-alone-immigration
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