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Obama On Immigration: ‘In Embracing America, You Can Become American’

Under El Paso’s sunny skies and just a few yards from the U.S-Mexico border, President Barack Obama called for immigration reform that would help enrich a country made up of immigrants.

Despite the heat and a strong breeze that kicked up at times, some people stood through the president’s entire 35-minute speech at the Chamizal National Memorial – even after waiting two hours to hear him speak.

Clearly not used to that, the president told people there was no requirement for them to stand while he spoke.

There was a lot of interaction like that during the speech between the president and the crowd, including people calling out to him and he answered.

But clearly the biggest message of his speech was one of the need for immigration reform, one that resonated well with many in attendance.

El Pasoan Keri Moe said she didn’t mind waiting in the heat to hear the president speak about such an important topic.

“I am excited and honored to see Obama for the first time especially at the Chamizal,” Moe said before the speech. “I’m hoping his words and presence illustrate the importance of the border region and the impact immigration and international policy have on us all.”

El Paso City Rep. Susie Byrd, during a break from the city’s weekly City Council meeting, said she also was excited about the speech.

“I was really excited about what he had to say about, particularly about immigration reform as an issue he’s gonna own and use his political will on it and i think its something that’s very important for our country,” Byrd said.

Obama arrived at Biggs Army Airfield shortly after 12:30 p.m. where he was greeted by several Fort Bliss VIPs, soldiers and families.

Obama also was greeted by Congressman Silvestre Reyes and El Paso Mayor John Cook and gave both handshakes and hugs.

Traveling with Obama on Air Force One was Dept. of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. Napolitano last visited El Paso in March. Napolitano said during the visit that security along our border with Mexico is, “Better now than it ever has been. The Border is open for business.”

Obama’s first trip as president to the U.S.-Mexico border is the setting he has chosen to sharpen his call for a remake of the nation’s immigration laws and try to cast the GOP as the obstacle standing in its way.

The president’s speech in El Paso on Tuesday, and his visit to a border crossing here, are the latest high-profile immigration events by Obama, who has also hosted meetings at the White House recently with Latino lawmakers, movie stars and others.

Obama began his speech by talking about a recent commencement address.

“Now, about a week ago, I delivered the commencement address at Miami Dade Community College, one of the most diverse schools in the nation. The graduates were proud that their class could claim heritage from 181 countries around the world,” Obama said at the Chamizal National Memorial Park. “Many of the students were immigrants themselves, coming to America with little more than the dreams of their parents and the clothes on their backs. A handful had discovered only in adolescence or adulthood that they were undocumented. But they worked hard and gave it their all, and they earned those diplomas.”

Obama reminded the audience that that commencement exemplified a simple idea as old as America itself: E pluribus, unum. Out of many, one.

“We define ourselves as a nation of immigrants – a nation that welcomes those willing to embrace America’s precepts,” Obama said. “That’s why millions of people, ancestors to most of us, braved hardship and great risk to come here – so they could be free to work and worship and live their lives in peace. The Asian immigrants who made their way to California’s Angel Island. The Germans and Scandinavians who settled across the Midwest. The waves of the Irish, Italian, Polish, Russian, and Jewish immigrants who leaned against the railing to catch that first glimpse of the Statue of Liberty.This flow of immigrants has helped make this country stronger and more prosperous. We can point to the genius of Einstein and the designs of I. M. Pei, the stories of Isaac Asimov and whole industries forged by Andrew Carnegie.”

Obama told the story of the naturalization ceremonies held at the White House for members of the military, which he has found to be so inspiring.

“Even though they were not yet citizens, these men and women had signed up to serve. One was a young man named Granger Michael from Papua New Guinea, a Marine who deployed to Iraq three times,” Obama said. “Here’s what he said about becoming an American citizen. “I might as well. I love this country already.” Marines aren’t big on speeches. Another was a woman named Perla Ramos. She was born and raised in Mexico, came to the United States shortly after 9/11, and joined the Navy. She said, “I take pride in our flag ? and the history we write day by day.”

Obama’s push for immigration reform all comes despite an unfavorable climate on Capitol Hill, where Republicans who control the House have shown no interest in legislation that offers a pathway to citizenship for the nation’s 11 million illegal immigrants.

That’s led to criticism that Obama’s efforts are little more than politics in pursuit of the ever-growing Hispanic electorate ahead of the 2012 election. White House officials dispute that. They acknowledge the difficulties in getting a bill but say it’s likelier to happen if the president creates public support for immigration legislation, leading to pressure on Republican lawmakers.

“We already know from the first two years, the last Congress, that there was political opposition to comprehensive immigration reform, including from some places where there used to be political support,” said presidential spokesman Jay Carney. “We are endeavoring to change that dynamic by rallying public support, by raising public awareness about the need for comprehensive immigration reform.”

At the same time, the strategy allows Obama to highlight that Republicans are standing in the way of an immigration bill ? shifting responsibility away from himself at a time when many Latino activists say he never made good on his campaign promise of prioritizing immigration legislation early on.

Obama’s spotty immigration record in the eyes of Latino voters makes it all the more politically imperative for him to shore up their support with his re-election campaign approaching.

“What’s different from 2008 is that there are more Hispanics and more millennials in the electorate overall. Latinos are even a bigger share than they were in 2008,” said Simon Rosenberg, a former Clinton White House strategist who follows immigration policy as head of the left-of-center NDN think tank. “Millennials” is a term for people born after 1980.

More Latinos than ever voted in the 2010 midterm elections, according to the Pew Hispanic Center, accounting for almost 7 percent of those voting. Still, turnout among Hispanic voters is far lower than among other groups, giving Obama a reason to want to try to motivate them. He’s picked hostile political territory to make his pitch, visiting a state he lost by more than 10 percentage points in 2008. But the trip does have one overtly political upside: Obama plans a side trip to the relatively liberal bastion of Austin to raise money for the Democratic National Committee at two fundraisers Tuesday night.

At the same time, Obama is pitching his immigration argument to the larger public, and he’s refining it in a way that goes to Americans’ pocketbook concerns. White House officials say Obama will emphasize the economic value of reforming immigration laws, noting that immigrants account for a substantial share of business start-ups and patent applications, among other things ? activities that create jobs for everyone.

It’s a different approach than talking about immigration as a security issue or a moral one, and also provides a counter to the Republican argument that illegal immigrants drain U.S. resources.

The president will also argue that his administration has made great strides on border security. Administration officials boast of increasing the number of agents on the border, seizing more contraband and nearing completion of a border fence, and say they plan to extend the deployment of National Guard troops Obama sent to the border. To Republicans who say that immigration overhaul legislation shouldn’t happen until the border is secure, the White House now says it’s as secure as it’s ever been and the conversation on legislation needs to happen.

Republicans aren’t buying it.

“It seems President Obama has once again put on his campaigner-in-chief hat. The president’s push to legalize millions of illegal immigrants is purely political,” said Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee. “And even though administration officials like to pretend the border is secure, the reality is that it isn’t.”

Brendan Buck, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said that House Republicans had no plans to take up immigration legislation and argued that if Obama were serious about immigration reform he would have reached out to Boehner on the issue, which Buck said he hasn’t.

The White House says Obama will push Tuesday for legislation and release a blueprint on his approach to reform, but without setting out any timeline. Indeed, getting immigration reform done any time soon is not realistic. Obama wasn’t even able to get legislation through Congress last year that would have provided a route to legal status for college students and others who were brought to the country as children. The so-called DREAM Act passed the House, then controlled by Democrats, but was blocked by Senate Republicans.

The Senate is now even more heavily Republican, and Republicans control the House. That means immigration reform can’t happen unless they cooperate.

But for Obama, if the public’s aware of that, it’s a political win ? even if Republicans don’t budge.

Related Links:Obama Takes Shots At Republicans Over Border Security Criticisms

ABC-7’s Darren Hunt and Leonard Martinez contributed to this report.

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