Obama says illegal immigrants should prepare for court to uphold executive action

Published February 26, 2015

Feb. 26, 2015: U.S. President Barack Obama participates in the taping of an town hall discussion on immigration with host Jose Diaz-Balart at Florida International University in Miami. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

President Obama said illegal immigrants who would be eligible for protection from deportation under his recent, disputed executive orders should plan for them to be upheld in court.

"People should be gathering up their papers, make sure you can show you are a long standing resident of the United States," Obama said Wednesday evening at a town hall meeting hosted by the Spanish-language TV network Telemundo. He said immigrants should make sure that by the time the legal issues are sorted out, "you are ready to go."

A federal judge in Texas temporarily blocked Obama's executive action earlier this month at the request of a coalition of 26 states who claim in a lawsuit that the president overstepped his legal authority.

On Wednesday, Obama said he expected to win when a U.S. circuit court hears his appeal, but added that his administration will "take it up from there" if the appeal fails, in an apparent reference to the Supreme Court. He said at each stage of the process, the White House believes it has the better argument.

"This is just one federal judge," Obama said of U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen, who put Obama's order on hold. "We have appealed it very aggressively. We're going to be as aggressive as we can."

Dismissing those hoping for a presidential about-face, Obama insisted he was "absolutely committed" to the new policy, which he described as focusing deportation efforts on felons.

"We are reorganizing how we work with state and local governments to make sure that we are not prioritizing families [for deportation]," Obama said. "And you are gonna see, I think, a substantial change even as the case works its way through the courts."

As Obama spoke in Miami, another immigration drama was playing out in Congress, where lawmakers were attempting to fund Homeland Security over the insistence by some Republicans that Obama's immigration actions be repealed at the same time. Obama derided Republicans for holding national security funding hostage and said he would veto a stand-alone measure to repeal his actions being contemplated in the Senate.

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Obama says illegal immigrants should prepare for court to uphold executive action

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