By David Nakamura Washington Post
WASHINGTON - President Obama, his second-term agenda bogged down amid political controversies and partisan gridlock, moved Tuesday to bolster support for a sweeping overhaul of immigration laws, saying Congress "needs to act and the moment is now."
Obama's speech in the East Room of the White House marked his most forceful remarks on the issue in weeks and came shortly before the Senate voted 84-15 to bring a comprehensive immigration bill to the floor for debate. Though all 55 Democrats and a majority of Republicans supported moving the bill forward, the legislation faces a far-from-certain path in the Senate, which is likely to vote in early July.
After months of allowing a bipartisan group of eight senators to take the lead on drafting the bill, Obama sought to reassert his position at a time when conservative Republicans have begun mounting a forceful opposition.
The president said the 867-page bill is a compromise in which neither Democrats nor Republicans would get everything they want. But he emphasized that the United States is a "nation of immigrants" and said the estimated 11 million people who are in the country illegally deserve a clear chance to become citizens.
"If you genuinely believe we should fix our broken immigration system, there's no good reason to stand in the way of this bill," Obama said, flanked by a coalition of business, religious and political leaders. "If you're serious about actually fixing the system, then this is the vehicle to do it."
By re-entering the debate this week, the president is trying to exert his influence while not upsetting the delicate balance of the bipartisan group that negotiated the deal, aides said.
Obama has made the immigration overhaul one of his top second-term priorities, but his administration played mostly a supportive role as the Senate group negotiated the legislation. White House aides have said the president recognizes that being too far in front on immigration could risk scaring off Republicans fearful of being tied too closely to him.