In the News
- Immigration: Obama/Boehner secret face-off
- Immigration: “Don’t poison the well,” Mr Obama
- Thousands of child migrants still lack lawyers
- Boehner feisty in presser
- Obama sent “secret letter” to Khameini – report
- October jobs report: 4 things to watch
- Who killed Osama bin Laden?
- VA sec bites back at lawmakers
- Court upholds same-sex marriage ban in 4 states
- U.S. jets strike at “Khorasan group” in Syria
Immigration: Obama/Boehner Secret Face-Off
• President Obama and Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) held previously unreported talks over a legislative compromise to fix the balky immigration system starting after the 2012 election. The discussions ended this summer with the two men sitting stony-faced around a white wrought-iron table outside the Oval Office, aides said (WSJ, me)
• “When you play with matches, you take the risk of burning yourself,” Boehner said Thursday of possible unilateral action by the president. Obama vowed in his Wednesday postelection presser to move ahead on immigration by himself
• The president and speaker began talking with some optimism after Congress’s bid to overhaul immigration ran aground in summer 2013. Hispanic supporters of Obama were growing impatient and some Republicans were seeking a fresh approach
• In an early sign of success, Boehner asked the president not to criticize Republicans on the issue, fearing this would antagonize lawmakers skeptical of an overhaul. Obama agreed
Talked Past One Another
• After several phone conversations, Obama agreed in November to seek a piecemeal overhaul rather than one bill as long as together it accomplished the goals of a broader bill. They even batted around ideas for tackling a so-called path to citizenship
• More often, however, the two men talked past one another, aides said. Boehner told colleagues that he found it hard to squeeze a word in, and that Obama didn’t grasp how Washington works. Obama and WH officials grew skeptical that Boehner could sell any deal to House Republicans
• In January, Boehner asked the president to stop signing executive orders on other issues, such as the minimum wage, while they worked on a deal. The speaker thought such a gesture might appease Republican lawmakers accusing Obama of abusing presidential power
• Some of the president’s aides thought it was a phony excuse. They thought the speaker couldn’t come through with the needed votes. Obama offered what he saw as a compromise: The WH would defer action on immigration until after the summer to give the speaker maneuvering room
Boehner: “He Just Doesn’t Get it”
• In the discussion, however, Obama followed up with his go-to talking point in dealings with Boehner: “There will never be another Republican president again if you don’t get a handle on immigration reform
• Boehner resented getting advice from a Democratic president on how to make Republicans a more viable force. What he wanted was more specific: A strategy to build a coalition in the House that could pass a bill
• It became increasingly common for Boehner to hang up the phone with Obama and sigh, “He just doesn’t get it.” Senior WH officials, for their part, saw Boehner as a leader perpetually vulnerable to being deposed. House conservatives wanted tougher border security, not millions of new citizens
Obama: “Now You’re Suing Me?”
• On a personal level, their conversations remained friendly. A WH social invitation offered to Boehner was a turning point. The speaker requested a meeting with the president before the event. That got the WH’s attention. Previously, it was Obama who initiated contact
• Seated around a table outside the Oval Office, Boehner told Obama that the window for passing legislation was as narrow as it gets. His caucus was rattled by a child refugee crisis and the primary defeat of Majority Leader Eric Cantor, in which immigration played a part
• During the 15-minute conversation, Boehner also informed Obama the House planned to file a lawsuit over his use of executive authority. “Now you’re suing me?” Obama said to the speaker
• The following day Boehner announced his lawsuit. A week later, Obama publicly declared any change to the immigration system dead for the year. He blamed Boehner
Immigration: Don’t “Poison the Well,” Mr Obama
• Republicans took a harsh tone with President Obama one day after his post-midterms presser, in which he pledged to take executive action on immigration reform before the end of the year. “If the president acts on his own, he will poison the well,” Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) said at his own Thursday presser (Politico, TRNS, Hill, me)
• “If you play with matches, you can risk burning yourself,” Boehner, a heavy smoker, said. “The American people made it clear on Election Day: They want to get things done and they don’t want the president acting on a unilateral basis. “If the president continues to go down the path of taking action on his own, he’s inviting big trouble.”
• Rep Lamar Smith (R-TX) spelled it out to Bloomberg. “We might try to defund what he does. We’ll obviously try a lawsuit. There may be actions we can take otherwise.” (obviously lawsuit?) “When he does this, he’s just frankly going to poison the barrel and make it awfully hard to work with him on other issues.” (why? it’s politics)
• Sen John McCain (R-AZ), who was one of four Republican members of the Gang of Eight that crafted the immigration bill that passed the Senate last year, said on MSNBC, “I literally am pleading with the president of the United States not to act. Give it a chance. We’ve got a new Congress. We’ve got a new mandate.” (come on, John)
• Always friendly and cordial, chairman of the Republican National Committee Reince Priebus said on CNN that Obama has been “lying” to Hispanic voters across the country for the last year. “I don’t believe a thing he says” on immigration
Thousands of Child Migrants Still Lack Lawyers
• Newly released govt data show an immigration court system under stress as judges face pressure to expedite deportation cases even as thousands of child migrants – many under 14 and with no grasp of English – are still without attorneys to represent them (Politico, me)
• The fast pace of arraignments has been quite extraordinary, with 11,392 master calendar hearings held from 18 July to 21 October or more than 800 a week. Of the 1542 removal orders issued in the same time period, 94% fell on children having no counsel (appalling)
• The full impact of the process has probably not yet been felt because of the abundance of continuances granted by judges allowing more time for children to seek counsel. But more than a third of these continuances will begin to run out in the coming weeks, posing a fresh challenge for the courts and also Congress
• Republicans are far stronger after the election and as a rule have opposed efforts to provide public funding for attorneys. But lawmakers must come to grips with appropriations for the 2015 fiscal year which began on 1 Oct
• The GOP must then contend with not only the inequities of the current situation but also the fact that the shortage of defense counsel – and frequent continuances – hurt the Republicans’ own goal of expediting the process
• President Obama and VP Biden meet for lunch today with members of the Congressional leadership at the WH (fly on wall)
Boehner Feisty in Presser
• House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) was feisty and confrontational at his presser Thursday. “I have told the president before he needs to put politics aside and rebuild trust and rebuilding trust not only with the American people but with the American people’s representatives here in the United States Congress.” (Politico, Fox, TRNS, Hill, TRNS, CNN, me)
• “Finding common ground is going to be hard work, but it will be harder if the president isn’t willing work with us. Yesterday we heard him say he may double down on his go it alone approach.” Boehner never mentioned the word “compromise” once in his press conference
• He listed five main priorities – “fix our broken tax code, address the debt that’s hurting our economy and imprisoning the future of our kids and grandkids, reform our legal system, reshape our regulatory policy to make bureaucrats more accountable, and give parents more choices in a system that isn’t educating enough of America’s children.”
• “The House, I’m sure, at some point next year, will move to repeal Obamacare. It should be repealed, it should be replaced with common-sense reforms that respect the doctor-patient relationship. Whether that can pass the Senate, I don’t know. But I know in the House, that will pass.”
• On immigration, “If the president acts on his own, he will poison the well. If you play with matches, you can risk burning yourself. The American people made it clear on Election Day: They want to get things done and they don’t want the president acting on a unilateral basis.”
• Rep Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) told members of her caucus Thursday in a 75-minute call that Democrats didn’t win Tuesday because Democrats didn’t vote (duh) She doesn’t think there’s a problem with the message. (some members do) (Hill, me)
Obama Sent “Secret Letter” to Khameini – Report
• President Obama wrote a secret letter to Iran’s Supreme Leader describing a shared interest in fighting ISIS, according to people briefed on the correspondence. The letter, reported by WSJ, urges Ayatollah Ali Khamemei toward a nuclear agreement (WSJ, BBC, Hill, me)
• Obama stressed in the letter that any cooperation on fighting ISIS is contingent on Iran reaching such an agreement by a 24 November diplomatic deadline. WH spox Josh Earnest declined Thursday to comment on Obama’s “private correspondence.” The letter, sent last month, is at least the fourth time the president has written to Khameini
• Officials with the Obama admin have, in recent days, placed the chances for a deal on Iran’s nuclear program as only 50/50, according to WSJ. (Obama has said that in the past, also) SecState John Kerry is scheduled to begin negotiations on the issue with Iranian counterpart Javad Zarif this weekend in Oman
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• An interim deal agreed late last year gave Iran some relief from sanctions in return for curbs on nuclear activity. But talks stalled on the extent of uranium enrichment Iran would be allowed and on the timetable for sanctions to be lifted. Iran denies that it’s trying to make a nuclear bomb
• Thursday, Earnest said, “The U.S. will not cooperate militarily with Iran in that effort
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