You Want Executive Action? Here’s Some Executive Action
By
Mark Krikorian
October 3, 2014 4:02 PM
Comments 9
The president promises to lawlessly amnesty millions of illegal aliens on his own say-so, enabling them to get work cards, Social Security numbers, driver’s licenses, EITC, foreign travel documents, and the rest. But there are executive powers that he really
does possess that he’s not using. Senator Sessions has helpfully provided a number of “
lawful, constitutional executive actions” that the president should already be undertaking but isn’t:
- Complete the border fence that Congress has previously passed into law;
- Create the exit-entry system to track foreign visa-holders, which Congress has repeatedly mandated;
- Cancel visas to any country that won’t take back its own citizens;
- Stop the improper issuance of billions of dollars in child tax credits to illegal immigrants,
- Enforce the currently un-enforced public charge rule for immigrants to the U.S., both legal and illegal;
- Crack down on abuse of the H-1B guest worker program that is displacing U.S. workers;
- Increase, don’t reduce, prosecutions under the proven Operation Streamline;
- Instead of suing states that are trying to enforce the law, target sanctuary cities that are defying the law; and
- Cancel all meetings with pro-amnesty groups to plot executive amnesty, and instead meet with Chris Crane, Ken Palinkas, and Chris Cabrera (of ICE, USCIS, and Border Patrol). Instead of ordering them not to do their jobs, sit down with them ask what they need to end the lawlessness and restore integrity to our nation’s immigration system.”
My colleague
Jessica Vaughan points out that the president has the authority “to deny admission to any alien that has (or cannot establish to the government’s satisfaction that he or she doesn’t have) a communicable disease of public health significance.”
And
Christian Adams explains that the president has even broader power than that, citing the statute that allows him to bar entry to any foreigner for any reason:
Whenever the President finds that the entry of any aliens or of any class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the United States, he may by proclamation, and for such period as he shall deem necessary, suspend the entry of all aliens or any class of aliens as immigrants or nonimmigrants, or impose on the entry of aliens any restrictions he may deem to be appropriate.
So, with all these lawful executive powers, why is he ignoring them and claiming powers he does
not have?
http://www.nationalreview.com//corn...on-heres-some-executive-action-mark-krikorian