The President’s “misspeaking” on his Obama Care 
pledges have doomed any chance of immigration reform, or any other major
 reform, for that matter. Obama may go into campaign mode on immigration
 reform to gain Hispanic votes, but it will be only talk. There can be 
no comprehensive reform of anything – immigration, entitlements, or the 
national debt — if legislators and, more importantly, the voters do not 
trust the President’s word.
Obama has declared immigration reform his top 
legislative priority for the rest of his term. In June of 2012, the 
Senate passed the Border Security,
 Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act, which spends 
more on border security, provides provisional legal status and eventual 
pathway to citizenship for people living in the country illegally, and 
outlines reforms for the existing visa programs for immediate relatives 
and skilled workers.
House Speaker John Boehner
 declared the Senate bill a nonstarter and expressed hope that the House
 would produce its own bill. A House bi-partisan group of four 
Republicans and four Democrats began drafting such a plan but has 
subsequently fallen apart with only one Republican remaining. The 
chances of passage of any comprehensive immigration reform during the 
Obama years are about zero.
 
 
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