More immigrants were forcibly removed from the United States under Obama than any other president. More than 2.8 million undocumented immigrants have been deported over the last eight years, marking a visceral point of conflict for DREAMers who say they have much to owe to the president.

This is what President Trump was faced with when he became President – in addition to the Obama/Hillary Clinton/Dem’s over through of the government and they have been trying to lynch him from the start. So don’t give me your idiocy that the Prez hasn’t done anything. In addition to that – he was face with Democrat judges who interfered with and made law instead of following the Constitution — and these judges have been called out by one of the Supreme Court Judges. This nerd – Cavuto – did not point out these facts.
Congress did not pass comprehensive immigration during Obama’s administration; a bipartisan Senate plan stalled in the House. But Obama broke new ground in creating DACA, which gave more than 800,000 young undocumented immigrants known as DREAMers a lifeline, with temporary work permits and protection from deportation.
(Obama created DACA by executive order which is illegal. It is Congress’ job. During this time Obama was using Sharia law and not the Constitution to run the country. The Supreme Court sanctioned him for this.)
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Jan. 15, 2017, 1:04 PM CST / Updated Jan. 15, 2017, 1:04 PM CST
By Amanda Sakuma
In March 2014, more than two years after President Barack Obama sailed to reelection in a historic sweep of the Latino vote, a powerful ally was about to call him out.
The president had been flying high on the success of his Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, a legacy-defining executive action that opened up broad horizons for thousands of young undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as young children. But there was a major wrinkle in his record that the president could not outrun.
At a gala that March, Janet Murguía, president of the National Council on La Raza (NCLR), stood before a room full of immigrant advocates and said what many had long been thinking in the back of their minds: Though congressional Republicans were on the hook for blockading comprehensive immigration reform, Obama was not blameless in their community’s visceral disappointment.
“For us, this president, Obama, has been the deporter-in-chief,” Murguía said.

Members of a coalition of Latino groups rally outside the Federal Building in Los Angeles on March. 26, 2014. The rally was part of the “Obama Legacy Project,” a campaign looking to hold President Obama accountable for record deportations. Damian Dovarganes / AP file
It was a shocking condemnation coming from one of the largest Latino advocacy groups in the country. NCLR had served as a pipeline of influential leaders who were elevated as advisers in the Obama White House.
Yet Murguía’s keynote address highlighted the vise squeezing around Obama: From one side, growing public outrage was bubbling in blaming the president for not doing enough to combat illegal immigration; on the other, a burgeoning Latino voting bloc with newly realized political clout was fast becoming disillusioned by the rising toll of deportations.
When Obama’s eight years in office come to a close, he will be leaving behind a mixed legacy on immigration that is tinged by political impasse and half-fulfilled promises.
Congress did not pass comprehensive immigration during Obama’s administration; a bipartisan Senate plan stalled in the House. But Obama broke new ground in creating DACA, which gave more than 800,000 young undocumented immigrants known as DREAMers a lifeline, with temporary work permits and protection from deportation.
(Obama created DACA by executive order which is illegal. It is Congress’ job.)
Undocumented DREAMer Astrid Silva hugs President Barack Obama after introducing him before the president’s remarks on his use of executive authority to relax U.S. immigration policy during a speech at Del Sol High School in Las Vegas on Nov. 21, 2014.Mike Blake / Reuters file
Again – yet at the same time, more immigrants were forcibly removed from the United States under Obama than any other president. More than 2.8 million undocumented immigrants have been deported over the last eight years, marking a visceral point of conflict for DREAMers who say they have much to owe to the president.
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Cavuto needs to do a better job and report facts and quit being lazy.
kommonsentsjan