Session #114 · 2015–17

Speech #1140064348

Madam President. last November. faced with Congresss failure to act. President Obama. through Executive action. took a courageous and practical step on immigration. Like every President since President Eisenhower. President Obama exercised his legal authority to prioritize U.S. immigration enforcement and make our system more fair and just. The most significant parts of the Presidents Executive actions were those intended to keep families together and give more people the opportunity to come out of the shadows. The President announced an expansion of the successful Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. or DACA. program. He also created a new Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents called DAPA. DAPA allows the undocumented parents of U.S.-born children to stay in this country with their families. Since its creation in 2012. DACA has given nearly 700.000 undocumented young people the opportunity to pursue their dreams through education and jobs. Sixty percent of DACA recipients have been able to find new jobs. contributing to our tax base and our economy. Experts estimate that DACA recipients will contribute $230 billion to our GDP over the next decade. Together. the expanded DACA and DAPA programs will mean that around 5 million more individuals will be able to work legally. pay their taxes. and care for their families. While the Presidents actions generated a great deal of support and excitement. they also generated opponents who challenged these actions in court. These court challenges resulted last week in a Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that further delays help for these 5 million people in our country.
Keywords matched
undocumented immigration DACA

Classification

Sentiment
Positive
Stereotyping
No
Confidence
100%
Model
gemini-2.0-flash
Framing
Economic contributor Family values Legal / procedural

Speaker & context

Speaker
MAZIE HIRONO
Party
D
Chamber
S
State
HI
Gender
F
Date
2015-11-19
Speech ID
1140064348
Paragraph
#0
← Prev Next →