Post by marcus on Jun 25, 2010 17:18:54 GMT -5
The Department of Homeland Security on Friday denied any plans to grant blanket amnesty to the "entire illegal immigrant population," following claims from senators and others that the Obama administration has been holding behind-the-scenes talks to craft a gameplan for mass legalization.
The concern is that DHS, in a bid to bypass Congress, would extend what is known as deferred action or parole -- actions usually taken on a case-by-case basis -- to millions of illegal immigrants at once.
The department statement, however, did not address the possibility of giving a selective reprieve to the segment of the population holding expired visas -- as opposed to those who crossed illegally. This is something that a former Bush administration official told FoxNews.com could be an option for the administration.
But the statement, while affirming its authority to grant the reprieves "on the merits of cases," said that authority is applied on a "case-by-case" basis and would not be drastically expanded.
"DHS does not grant deferred action without a review of relevant facts," the statement said. "To be clear, DHS will not grant deferred action to the nation's entire illegal immigrant population."
Related Links
Congresswoman Raises Red Flag on Hezbollah-Cartel Nexus on U.S. BorderThe Department of Homeland Security expressed the administration's support for the recently unveiled Senate immigration overhaul, calling it "a step in the right direction."
But several sources said it was their understanding that the administration has been discussing alternatives to congressional action.
The former Bush official had spoken with at least people involved in the administration talks on the subject and said at the minimum, the administration was "studying legal ways to legalize people without having to go through any congressional debate about it."
The former official said targeting the segment of the population that had overstayed visas could work, though such a plan would be "woefully inappropriate."
The Department of Homeland Security estimated last year that 10.8 million undocumented residents live in the United States -- the Pew Hispanic Center, which has a similar count, estimated in 2006 that at least 4 million of them overstayed their visas.
The issue was raised publicly earlier this week by eight Republican senators who wrote to the White House complaining that they had heard the administration was readying a "Plan B" in case a comprehensive immigration reform bill cannot win enough support to clear Congress.
They warned that any unilateral action would "further erode the American public's confidence in the federal government and its commitment to securing the borders and enforcing the laws already on the books."
The concern is that DHS, in a bid to bypass Congress, would extend what is known as deferred action or parole -- actions usually taken on a case-by-case basis -- to millions of illegal immigrants at once.
The department statement, however, did not address the possibility of giving a selective reprieve to the segment of the population holding expired visas -- as opposed to those who crossed illegally. This is something that a former Bush administration official told FoxNews.com could be an option for the administration.
But the statement, while affirming its authority to grant the reprieves "on the merits of cases," said that authority is applied on a "case-by-case" basis and would not be drastically expanded.
"DHS does not grant deferred action without a review of relevant facts," the statement said. "To be clear, DHS will not grant deferred action to the nation's entire illegal immigrant population."
Related Links
Congresswoman Raises Red Flag on Hezbollah-Cartel Nexus on U.S. BorderThe Department of Homeland Security expressed the administration's support for the recently unveiled Senate immigration overhaul, calling it "a step in the right direction."
But several sources said it was their understanding that the administration has been discussing alternatives to congressional action.
The former Bush official had spoken with at least people involved in the administration talks on the subject and said at the minimum, the administration was "studying legal ways to legalize people without having to go through any congressional debate about it."
The former official said targeting the segment of the population that had overstayed visas could work, though such a plan would be "woefully inappropriate."
The Department of Homeland Security estimated last year that 10.8 million undocumented residents live in the United States -- the Pew Hispanic Center, which has a similar count, estimated in 2006 that at least 4 million of them overstayed their visas.
The issue was raised publicly earlier this week by eight Republican senators who wrote to the White House complaining that they had heard the administration was readying a "Plan B" in case a comprehensive immigration reform bill cannot win enough support to clear Congress.
They warned that any unilateral action would "further erode the American public's confidence in the federal government and its commitment to securing the borders and enforcing the laws already on the books."