WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hispanic
lawmakers and immigration advocates harshly criticized President Barack
Obama's decision to delay executive action on immigration and vowed to
keep pressuring him to make bold changes.
Democratic
Representatives Luis Gutierrez and Tony Cardenas on Sunday accused
Obama of playing politics the day after the president said he would wait
until after November's congressional elections to change policy on
immigration.
The announcement marked a reversal for Obama, who publicly promised to act by the end of summer.
"Playing
it safe might win an election," Gutierrez said on ABC's "This Week"
program. "But it almost never leads to fairness, to justice and to good
public policy that you can be proud of."
Senate Democrats at risk of losing their seats in the November elections pressed the White House to hold off an executive order.
Though
many immigration advocates have been pushing hard for the White House
to ease up on deportations of undocumented immigrations, wariness among
the broader public began to build this summer, fueled by Republican
accusations that executive actions would mark an overstepping of Obama's
authority.
Democrats worry that an executive action could cause them to lose control of the Senate in November.
Gutierrez, a member of the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus and a passionate advocate of immigration
reform, said he had called Obama and White House officials after hearing
the executive action would be delayed. He said he expects to meet with
administration officials this week on the issue.
Cardenas,
who is also part of the Hispanic Caucus, said of Obama: "we all are
frustrated with him right now because he's taken way too long to take
his executive actions."
"I
don't like what the president's advisers may be telling him. I can only
speculate that they've encouraged them to wait. I would prefer he do it
now," Cardenas told the CNN's "State of the Union" program.
Immigrant advocacy groups also criticized the delay.
"The
president's latest broken promise is another slap to the face of the
Latino and immigrant community," Cristina Jimenez, managing director for
United We Dream, said in a statement on Saturday.
United
We Dream asked supporters on social media to use the hashtag,
"#deporterinchief," to urge Obama to pull back from deporting
undocumented immigrants.
The
Senate last year passed a sweeping immigration bill that would have
provided a path to citizenship for the 11 million undocumented
immigrants within the United States. But the bill stalled in the
Republican-controlled House of Representatives.
Republican opponents of the Senate bill have labeled it "amnesty" for people who entered the country illegally.
Obama
made clear in an interview with NBC's "Meet the Press" that he still
planned to take action on immigration but said he would work to build
support for such steps.
He
said the surge of unaccompanied minors flooding across the southern
border became a concern for many Americans and influenced the broader
debate over immigration.
"And
you know, the truth of the matter is that the politics did shift
midsummer because of that problem," Obama said in the interview, which
was taped Saturday and aired Sunday.
"I
want to spend some time, even as we're getting all our ducks in a row
for the executive action, I also want to make sure that the public
understands why we're doing this, why it's the right thing for the
American people, why it's the right thing for the American economy," he
added.
(Additional reporting by Will Dunham and Emily Stephenson; Editing by Caren Bohan and Paul Simao)
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