Sotomayor Could Buy Obama Time on Immigration
President Barack Obama's nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor might
buy him some time on a key campaign promise he made to Latino voters
about making comprehensive immigration legislation a priority in his
first year in office.
"I’m not sure I would even expect anything to pass in this
Congress, much less this year," James Gimpel, a professor at the
University of Maryland and expert on immigration politics, told The
Hill.
"I think it’s a lot to expect."
Obama's choice of Sotomayor has drawn praise from Latino voters
who turned out strongly for him in the 2008 presidential election. The
Latin community strongly supports immigration reform and would like the
president to make the nearly 12 million illegal aliens living in the
U.S. legal.
"The Latino community — and not just Latinos, but anyone who’s
had a set of life experiences like Sotomayor — will always remember
Barack Obama for this," Rep. Xavier Becerra, D-Calif., told The Hill in
support of Obama’s choice for the Supreme Court.
"This will inspire people who were hungry to see a reform of
our broken immigration system to stand behind the president on this
issue and behind the decisions he makes."
Obama, who is set to hold a high-profile meeting on immigration
with key lawmakers June 8, recently has seen an increase in his
favorability rating among Latinos rise from 67 percent to 81 percent,
according to a University of Washington poll, and may experience
another increase with his controversial high court pick.
However, Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies
writes in the National Review that there’s no way immigration reform is
going to happen this year. Recent surveys show more than 75 percent of
U.S. citizens are against providing amnesty to illegals.
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