America's Hispanics need a Leader in the White
House, not a Politician We can't Trust
SANTA FE, NM (By
Jon Garrido, The Jon Garrido Network)
May 30,
2011 —
Most Hispanics in the USA know President Barack Obama is lying to
U.S. Hispanics on immigration issues.
Even some of Obama's closest Democratic allies have known about
this for a long time but finally are now publically acknowledging Obama is
simply paving the
road for the 2012 election placing the blame for inaction on Immigration Reform
on the Republicans.
We all know Obama is not an ardent advocate for Hispanics. He has
no empathy for us so he does not understand the hardship created by the ever
present danger/fear of deportation away from family and return to a much lesser life away from the
United States.
Because of this, Obama is not sincere regarding Immigration
Reform and all so called advocacy is simply for show posturing for 2012.
In his May 10
speech in El Paso, Texas, Obama stated only Congress can propose legislation to
overhaul Immigration Reform.
This is partially true for the role of Congress given by the U.S.
Constitution is to write federal legislation but the President of the United States
also has the authority and power to steer legislation from the White House using
the someone in the House or Senate to carry the water.
This is exactly the process Obama successfully used to obtain
approval of Health Care Reform; a process where Obama was directly involved in the
smallest detail writing health care legislation, twisting arms and offering
deals to win sufficient votes for passage.
This is the definition of a leader.
This direct involvement was germinated in the 2008
presidential election campaign when Obama pledged he would orchestrate passage of Immigration
Reform during his first year in office. He made the same pledge in the
second year of his presidency but again failed to carry the football into the
end zone for a touch down. He did not even come close to scoring.
Immigration reform for Obama is not the same as
health care reform. The obvious reason is Obama has no empathy for Hispanics but
rather does as little as he has to win Hispanic votes.
Obama’s campaign rhetoric may help win Hispanic votes in the 2012 election by
placing blame on congressional Republicans as the stumbling block for
immigration reform, but Obama’s rhetoric is creating false expectations among
Hispanics.
What has been known since 2009 and is now being publically stated by a growing number of Democrats in Congress
and Latino leaders across the USA is Obama’s
immigration reform campaign is political posturing because the president knows
full well he can not get the needed votes for congressional passage of comprehensive
immigration reform in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.
So what should Obama do?
Rep. Luis Gutierrez, a Democratic congressman from
Chicago on a national tour, is denouncing Obama's immigration stand. Gutierrez
claims Obama is playing games with Hispanics by claiming to be fighting for
comprehensive immigration reform at in the same breath, Obama has Napolitano
doing massive deportations of people who should not be deported.
Gutierrez tells his national tour audiences this
deportation strategy to win Republican supporters for passage of Immigration
Reform does not work and Obama in lieu of deportations should use
the President's discretionary powers that do not require congressional approval.
First, Obama could use existing presidential powers to stop deportations of the
estimated 65,000 undocumented students who were brought to the United States as
children and graduate from high school every year then going on to college join
the armed forces. Obama has called repeatedly for
congressional passage of the Dream Act knowing full well of there is zero
probability of passage in the Congress blaming failure on the Republicans.
This is politically expedient but a better alternative would allow these youths to stay
in the United States
by using his discretionary powers to delay their deportations until Congress
decides on their fate.
Second, Obama should use his executive powers to delay deportation of the
parents of the estimated four million U.S.-born children who have at least one
parent who does not have legal status.
There is precedent for this action: The Obama administration recently used discretionary powers to give temporary
residency status to Haitian immigrants to avoid their deportation to
earthquake-devastated Haiti. Why not give similar relief to Mexicans who face
deportation to violence-ridden Ciudad Juárez?
So why is Obama not doing any of this?
Obama takes the Hispanic vote for granted and does not feel
any pressure knowing full well Hispanics
will vote for him anyway. Maybe!
To reinforce the lack of empathy for Hispanics, Obama
does not understand how devastating deportations are for Hispanic families.
Deportations are a matter of life and death for Hispanics and have to be taken seriously and not used to deceive the
Hispanic community
as we approach the 2012 election.
Responding to such criticism, Obama said in his May 10 speech in El Paso, Texas,
“I wish I could simply bypass Congress and change the law myself, but that’s not
how a democracy works.”
Obama claims Immigration Reform must come from the Congress
but until Congress acts, the White House claims it is changing the way it
enforces deportation procedures, focusing on removing undocumented immigrants
with criminal records.
This is a deliberate lie. Countless undocumented
without criminal records are being deported as evidence of the White House strategy of
prioritizing enforcement.
Obama should stop playing this game. Instead of fearing being criticized by
Hispanic-phobic anti-immigration zealots for allegedly pursuing a blanket
“amnesty” for 11 million undocumented residents, Obama should use his discretionary
powers to give temporary status to some categories of immigrants.
For instance, as he said in his State of the Union address, “it makes no sense”
to deport thousands of undocumented students who grew up as Americans, or others
— including many from China, India and other parts of the world — who came to
study in some of the best U.S. universities, and upon obtaining advanced degrees
are “sent back home to compete against us.”
Obama can stop their deportations,
but — all know Obama does not need to or want to.
Obama —
more politician than leader
In
his El Paso border speech , President Obama showed once
again he is a more masterful politician but less
courageous leader than we might have imagined. What
will this mean for the country's Hispanics remains deeply
uncertain.
The president entered this year confident of re-election,
but just to be sure, he adopted a clever political strategy
to deal with the immigration crisis: Republicans will benefit most from the
immigration
debate because Obama has presided over massive deportation increases while bobbing and weaving
from the sidelines proposing Congress move on immigration
reform.
In essence, Obama is putting
blame on the Republicans for failing to legislate
immigration reform for Hispanic voters as he heads toward the 2012 election: On hard issues
— the
ones that are really hard — the president
once again isn't leading; he is delegating.
Republicans, of course, say this is a
complete distortion. As a politician, Obama was also smart
in his May 10 El Paso speech and other recent speeches leaving so little for Republicans to shoot at
in his own "plan."
On every hard policy question —
e.g., would you start taxing employees for health benefits
paid by employers — he said he would leave the answers to someone
else.
"We must limit the growth of Medicare
to GDP plus a half percent a year. How? Leave that to an
Independent Payment Advisory Board."
"We need built-in
guarantees to reduce the deficits. How? Leave that to a
failsafe mechanism that will automatically kick in around
2014." (never mind that Obama's former budget director says it
could be unreliable).
Writing a stimulus
bill? Leave that to Congress. Coming up with a health care
plan? Leave that to Congress. Asserting control over Gadhafi?
Leave that to NATO.
On the Hispanic priority Obama said in his May 10 speech,
"We must reform
immigration. How?" Obama said, "Let Congress figure it out."
On every national dilemma that will inevitably require
public sacrifices, he didn't put forward a single, concrete
proposal of his own that would disturb a majority of voters.
Clever!
But on the hard issues — the ones that are really
hard — the president once again isn't leading; he is
delegating.
But it is that very cleverness
that undermines his reputation as a leader. We look up to
leaders who have been willing to make hard choices on their
own, put them forward with courage and rally people to join
them — think of Lincoln, Churchill, and Mandela.
Where is that courage in the
White House today? Not to found!
No one can tell for sure what
all of Obama's
speeches will do for the future of the USA.
These fun and
games speeches may be good for electioneering and for television
ratings, but they aren't good for the country.
I will not Support the Re-Election of Barack Obama.......
Some content from wire services,
Miami Herald, and CNN