Obama wants immigration laws overhauled

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President Barack Obama gestures while speaking about the need to overhaul U.S. immigration laws. Obama spoke Friday at the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials conference in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP)
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He noted that Romney during the Republican primaries said he would veto legislation, known as the DREAM Act, that would give a path to citizenship to young immigrants who came to the United States illegally as children but have since attended school or served in the military.

“He has promised to veto the DREAM Act and we should take him at his word,” he said,

It was lack of action on the DREAM Act – the Development, Relief and Education of Alien Minors Act – that led him to take the administrative steps he did last week to defer deportation for some young illegal immigrants and give them work permits instead, he said.

“It falls short of where we need to be, a path to citizenship,” he said. “It’s not a permanent fix. It’s a temporary measure that lets us focus our resources wisely while offering some justice to these young people.”

The directive could benefit anywhere between 800,000 to 1.4 million immigrants. On Friday, the Department of Homeland Security said it has found 823 cases in the backlog of deportation cases that will qualify for closure under Obama’s new rule, making them eligible for work permits. The department said it expects to identify thousands more cases in the coming weeks.

Romney on Thursday assailed Obama’s action as merely a “stopgap measure” in his own speech to the association, backing off the tough anti-illegal immigration rhetoric of the Republican primaries. He promised to address illegal immigration “in a civil but resolute manner.”

Obama spoke about two hours after Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who has been promoting a plan that would have dealt with young illegal immigrants in a similar fashion to what Obama accomplished administratively.

Rubio, a possible running mate for Romney, said the issue had been politicized and neither side wanted to solve it because it was a more powerful political tool if left to fester.

“I was accused of supporting apartheid,” Rubio said. “I was accused of supporting a DREAM Act without a dream. Of course, a few months later the president takes a similar idea and implements it through executive action and now it’s the greatest idea in the world.”

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