Close Menu
CCMECCME
  • Home
  • Who are we
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the council
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world
  • Interviews
  • Archives of the council
    • Activities
    • Media and migration
    • News
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • Share a contribution
  • Home
  • Who are we
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the council
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world
  • Interviews
  • Archives of the council
    • Activities
    • Media and migration
    • News
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • Share a contribution
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
CCMECCME
  • English
    • العربية
    • Français
  • Home
  • Who we are
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the Council
    • News of migration in the world
    • News of Moroccan migration
  • Resources
Partager une tribune شارك بمساهمة Share a contribution
  • Spécial SIEL 2025
  • Programmation
  • Axes
    • Voix des amériques
    • Maroc-Belgique: Histoire, Migrations et commémorations
    • Migrations et sciences sociales : où en est la recherche sur les migrations marocaines ?
    • Écritures féminines au maroc et dans l’immigration
  • Rencontres
    • Rencontres et débats
    • Rencontres philosophiques
    • Cinéma une rétrospective des films pionniers du cinéma marocain sur l’émigration/immigration
  • Vient de paraitre
  • Hommages
CCMECCME
  • English
    • العربية
    • Français
  • Spécial SIEL 2025
  • Programmation
  • Axes
  • Rencontres
  • Vient de paraitre
  • Hommages
Home»Archives of the council»Media and migration

Obama dealt series of setbacks on immigration, takes fire from all sides

Media and migration 23 March 2015
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp Copy Link
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email WhatsApp Copy Link

President Obama’s immigration policies suffered a rough week, faltering in the courts, taking fire on Capitol Hill, angering his political base and even having his own deportation chief undercut his message as he struggles to find a middle-ground path to overhaul the nation’s immigration system.

The busy week climaxed late Friday, when U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced it had deported an illegal immigrant Mennonite pastor, in a case that has sparked fury among immigrant rights advocates who say it exposes the hypocrisy of Mr. Obama’s own statements about pushing for a more lenient policy that keeps families together.

The deportation was announced just hours after ICE Director Sarah Saldana was forced to walk back her statement from a day earlier that she wanted Congress to pass laws requiring state and local authorities to hold and turn over illegal immigrants.

Also Thursday, the federal judge who has temporarily halted Mr. Obama’s amnesty threatened further sanctions against the president’s attorneys, questioning whether they misled him by saying they hadn’t put any of the amnesty into action — even though they had been approving the so-called Dreamers under one part of the expanded program.

“Like an idiot, I believed that,” Judge Andrew S. Hanen said at a hearing in his Brownsville, Texas, courtroom, The Associated Press reported.

Republicans are gearing up for budget battles on the House and Senate floors this week, where immigration is likely to play a role as the GOP seeks to cut down on tax benefits available to those in the country without authorization.

Mr. Obama’s nominee to be the next attorney general, Loretta Lynch, has seen her support crater among Republicans over her backing of Mr. Obama’s amnesty moves, which she told the Senate earlier this year she believed were based on sound legal reasoning.

Judge Hanen has rejected that legal reasoning and issued an injunction. Ms. Lynch would be in charge of Mr. Obama’s appeal should she win confirmation to lead the Justice Department.

Even as conservative anger at Mr. Obama is boiling over, worry on the other side of the issue from immigrant rights advocates is growing after ICE last week deported Max Villatoro, a Mennonite pastor from Iowa who has been in the country for years, has four children who are U.S. citizens and whom the activists said was a perfect candidate for the president’s new, more lenient policies.

In addition to announcing proactive legal status for 4 million illegal immigrants, Mr. Obama in November also ordered immigration agents not to bother deporting most of the rest of the illegal immigrant population and to focus only on serious criminals.

ICE officials say Mr. Villatoro’s conviction in the 1990s for drunken driving makes him a priority for deportation, and despite a week of protests and demands for meetings between the activists and Homeland Security officials, late Friday, ICE sent Mr. Villatoro home to Honduras.

Mr. Villatoro was netted during a fugitive dragnet earlier this month that caught more than 2,000 illegal immigrants — some of whom had previously been released by state and local authorities who refused to cooperate by holding them for federal ICE agents.

That’s one reason Ms. Saldana agreed with congressional Republicans on Thursday that she would like to see Congress pass a law requiring cooperation.

“Thank you. Amen,” Ms. Saldana told the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Thursday.

That statement, however, is at odds with Mr. Obama’s policy of only targeting states that try to crack down on illegal immigrants while encouraging those that have lenient policies. And by Friday, amid an outcry from immigrant rights advocates who excoriated the administration over Ms. Saldana’s remarks, she was forced to eat her words.

“Any effort at federal legislation now to mandate state and local law enforcement’s compliance with ICE detainers will, in our view, be a highly counterproductive step and lead to more resistance and less cooperation in our overall efforts to promote public safety,” she said in a statement.

Despite her retreat, it’s likely Ms. Saldana’s true feelings hew closer to her testimony to Congress.

Earlier this month, at a press conference touting the 2,000 illegal immigrants netted in Operation Cross Check, Ms. Saldana and Deputy Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas lamented the states and localities that refuse to cooperate with federal immigration officials.

Ms. Saldana described one illegal immigrant from Mexico whom the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office refused to hold. He had been deported in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008 and 2013, and had sneaked back into the U.S. each time. He had a long rap sheet, yet the sheriff’s office released him, citing a California law that prohibits more extensive cooperation.

Mr. Mayorkas said cases like this, where a community refuses to help, actually hurt public safety.

 “That individual has been in the community despite his or her public safety threat — the public safety threat he or she poses,” Mr. Mayorkas said. “That is not of benefit to the community, nor to the benefit of law enforcement that is dedicated to protecting that community, because now the [detention] officers have to go in at personal risk to themselves to apprehend that very individual that we could have obtained custody of from a local facility.”

Ms. Saldana’s effort to walk back her comments didn’t sit well with House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, who said it underscores the administration’s aversion to immigration enforcement.

“Her statement today reflects the Obama administration’s true priority: to not enforce the immigration laws already on the books,” the Utah Republican said, vowing that his committee will press the issue with Ms. Saldana and other Homeland Security officials.

Perhaps the biggest threat to Mr. Obama’s immigration policy, however, remains the federal courts and Judge Hanen, who has issued an injunction against the 2014 amnesty, and last week said he’s still considering sanctioning the administration for misleading him over whether it was carrying out amnesty in certain cases already.

The Justice Department tried to apologize and throw itself on the mercy of the court, with Mr. Obama’s lawyers insisting he’s trying to do right. On Saturday, Mr. Obama’s lawyers told Judge Hanen there was no harm in letting the small part of the amnesty policy go into effect that extends the time that Dreamers can be granted “deferred action” from two years to three years.

The lawyers said they should get credit for having belatedly self-reported to the court that they were already carrying out part of the amnesty, and said there’s no harm to anyone right now in any case.

“The inherent power of the court to impose sanctions is to be exercised with restraint and discretion,” the administration said in a brief filed with the court. “Here, absolutely no evidence of bad faith or willful abuse of this court’s processes exists to justify discovery into potential sanctions.”

Source: The Washington Times

Related Posts

Paris Attacks: the intellectuals’ forecasts that we did not heed

30 November 2015

United States: Moroccan Taxi driver shot in the back on Thanksgiving Day

30 November 2015

Refugees welcome? How UK and Germany compare on migration

3 September 2015

Migration crisis: pressure mounts on Cameron over refugees

3 September 2015

Hundreds of migrants protest at Budapest station, want to go to Germany

3 September 2015

EU refugee crisis: World mourns Syrian toddler as Andy Burnham calls for emergency Parliament debate

3 September 2015

Our latest news

Marrakech: The “Trophées Marocains du monde” honors Moroccan diaspora

Marrakech: The “Trophées Marocains du monde” honors Moroccan diaspora   

12 May 2025
L'Espagne et le Maroc prévoient une augmentation du nombre d'utilisateurs de l'opération « Traversée du détroit 2025 »

 Spain and Morocco hold  the 36th Spanish-Moroccan Joint Commission meeting 

8 May 2025
المهاجرون الجدد يعوضون تراجع السكان الإسبان

Spain’s population reaches a record due to foreign residents

8 May 2025
شروط جديدة للحصول على الجنسية الفرنسية

France: A circular to tighten citizenship rules

6 May 2025

النشرة الإخبارية

اشترك لتلقي آخر الأخبار

قم بتنزيل تطبيق المجلس

ولا تنس تفعيل الإشعارات للحصول على آخر الأخبار!

Download CCME books for Android
Download CCME books for IOS
Logo CCME
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

المجلس

  • Who we are
  • The President
  • The General Secretary
  • Working groups

الأخبار

  • News
  • News of Moroccan migration
  • News of migration in the world
موارد
اتصل بنا
  • محج الرياض. ش 10 ص.ب 21481 - حي الرياض - الرباط 10000 - المغرب
  • contact@ccme.org.ma
  • +212 5 37 56 71 71 اتصل بنا​

2025 - © المجلس

  • Right of access to information
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us

Newsletter

Subscribe to receive the latest news

Download the CCME app

And don’t forget to activate notifications to receive the latest news!

Download CCME books for IOS
Download CCME books for Android
Logo CCME
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
CCME
  • Who we are
  • The President
  • The General Secretary
  • Working groups
News
  • News
  • News of Moroccan migration
  • News of migration in the world
Resources
Contact
  • Mahaj Ryad. Imm 10. B.P 21481 - Hay Ryad - Rabat 10 000 - Morocco
  • contact@ccme.org.ma
  • +212 5 37 56 71 71
© 2025 - CCME
  • Right of access to information
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us

Revue de presse

Abonnez-vous pour recevoir notre revue de presse

    Téléchargez l’application CCME

    Et n’oubliez pas d’activer les notifications pour recevoir les dernières actualités!

    Download CCME books for IOS
    Download CCME books for Android
    Logo CCME
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

    CCME

    • Who we are
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups

    Actualités

    • News
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world

    Ressources

    Contact

    • Mahaj Ryad. Imm 10. B.P 21481 - Hay Ryad - Rabat 10 000 - Maroc
    • contact@ccme.org.ma
    • +212 5 37 56 71 71

    © 2025 - CCME

    • Right of access to information
    • Terms of use
    • Contact us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.