8/7/2014 - Conn Carroll Townhall.com
The Washington Post's intrepid reporter
Greg Sargent scored a big
interview with one of the architects of
President Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program,
former-Department of Homeland Security general counsel John Sandweg. Here is
how Sandweg explains the legal justification for Obama's infamous
temporary-amnesty program:
The president is doing what every single law enforcement agency
across the country does: Put in place rational priorities to ensure that
limited resources are focused on the populations that pose the greatest threat
to public safety and border security. Every single law enforcement agency in
America struggles with the fact that their resources are not conditioned to
cover every single violation of the law. What prosecutors and police chiefs
have done for years is implement enforcement priorities. That’s what the
president has done.
So Obama's entire legal justification
for his DACA program rests on the premise that a broad based invitation for
illegal immigrants to apply for temporary amnesty ensures "that limited
resources are focused on the populations that pose the greatest threat to
public safety and border security."
But we already know, for a fact, that
DACA did the exact opposite. Instead of conserving limited resources, DACA
stretched DHS capabilities and degraded its ability to enforce good
congressionally approved immigration law.
How do we know this? Well for starters,
just look at the DACA
application* which requires a $465 filing fee. If
DACA is such a saver of DHS resources, then why is Obama charging generally
cash-strapped illegal immigrants $500?
More importantly, we know from
subsequent reporting that Obama under priced the cost of administering his
temporary amnesty program. The
New York Times reports:
Many thousands of Americans seeking green cards for foreign
spouses or other immediate relatives have been separated from them for a year
or more because of swelling bureaucratic delays at a federal immigration agency
in recent months.
The long waits came when the agency, Citizenship and Immigration Services, shifted attention and resources to a program President Obama started in 2012 to give deportation deferrals to young undocumented immigrants, according to administration officials and official data. …
Until recently, an American could obtain a green card for a
spouse, child or parent — probably the easiest document in the immigration
system — in five months or less. But over the past year, waits for
approvals of those resident visas stretched to 15 months, and more than 500,000
applications became stuck in the pipeline, playing havoc with international
moves and children’s schools and keeping families apart.
(emphasis added) In other words,
instead of ensuring that limited resources were saved so that the DHS could
better enforce good immigration law, Obama's DACA program shifted existed
resources away from those programs thus degrading DHS's immigration law
enforcement capabilities.
Amnesties are never free. They take
huge sums of cash and employee time to administer. If DACA's legal
justification is built on the premise that it enables DHS to better enforce the
law by conserving limited resources, then it is built on a lie.
*Never before has any president ever
created an application process to apply for deferred action, which all
presidents before Obama used sparingly.
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