Obama/Napolitano Plan Sheds Doubt on Campaign Pledge for "Path to Citizenship"
The effort is likely to significantly reshape immigration enforcement...
The Washington Post reports that the Obama Administration plans to continue a policy begun by the Bush Administration to screen people in jail for deportation, if they are found to be undocumented.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has made it "very clear" that her top priority is deporting illegal immigrants who have committed crimes, said David J. Venturella, program director at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
In short, the program's modus it to fingerprint all detainees in US jails to screen for immigration status. The ideas is that by screening everyone, the program avoids racial profiling.
While this may be true, two figures from the article are worth noting in light of the campaign rhetoric Team Obama promoted regarding undocumented people only last year, during then-Senator Obama's successful presidential campaign, a campaign in which he earned 67% of the Latino vote (as opposed to 31% for Republican Senator John McCain).
The first figure is that "fingerprints from 1 million local jail bookings will be screened under the program...and will expand to nearly all local jails by the end of 2012." The second is that "President Obama asked Congress last week for $200 million for the program, a 30 percent increase that puts it on track to receive $1.1 billion by 2013."
The implication here is that undocumented people will remain undocumented at until at least 2013, after the conclusion of President Obama's first term. After all, a program to deport undocumented people would be unnecessary in the advent of the comprehensive immigration reform advocating a "path to citizenship" that was promised during campaign '08, when then-Senator Obama said that "[illegal immigrants] broke the law and we can't excuse that - but we can't deport 12million people. " But under Napolitano's plan, it seems, we could...at least, in theory. After all, an illegal immigrant has already committed a crime, and all 'criminals' who arrive in U.S. jails will face deportation if they are found to be undocumented, an effort our Homeland Security Secretary is making her "top priority."












