**FILE** A line of legal immigrants wait outside the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights in Los Angeles on Aug. 15, 2012. Hundreds of thousands of young illegal immigrants scrambled to get papers in order, as the U.S. started accepting applications to allow them to avoid deportation and get a work permit, but not a path to citizenship. President Obama announced the program in June after pressure from Hispanic voters and others who said he hasn't fulfilled a campaign promise to overhaul tangled U.S. (Associated Press)
**FILE** A legal immigrant reads a guide of the conditions needed to apply for the so-called 'DREAMers' Obama program, formally known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), at the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights offices in Los Angeles on Aug. 15, 2012. Hundreds of thousands of young illegal immigrants scrambled to get papers in order as the U.S. started accepting applications to allow them to avoid deportation and get a work permit, but not a path to citizenship. (Associated Press)
**FILE** Cynthia Diaz, 17, quietly holds up a sign Sept. 19, 2012, dedicated to her mother as she joins dozens who rally in front of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building, a day after a portion of Arizona's immigration law took effect in Phoenix. Her mother was deported the previous year. Civil rights activists contend the state's law will lead to systematic racial profiling, as the protesters chanted "No papers, no fear." (Associated Press)
**FILE** Illegal immigrant Viridiana Martinez (right) is comforted April 5, 2011, by activist Mohammad Abdollahi as Maj. K.E. Williams (left) of the Atlanta Police Department warns her of arrest unless she moves during a protest for rights for higher education for illegal immigrants in Atlanta. (Associated Press)
**FILE** Young immigrants, along with members of local immigrant organizations, line up Aug. 15, 2012, in Phoenix for guidance for a new federal program called Deferred Action that would help them avoid deportation. The nationwide program will allow young immigrants to get work permits but not a path to citizenship. (Associated Press)
**FILE** New U.S. citizen Johanna Cornielle Mesa of Lawrence, Mass., originally from the Dominican Republic, gets a kiss from her boyfriend, Luis, while their son Luis Jr. plays with a flag after a naturalization ceremony in Fitchburg, Mass., on Sept. 6, 2012. (Associated Press)The election has strengthened President Obama’s hand on immigration, and Dream Act organizers said it likely means a flood of hundreds of thousands of new applications for his nondeportation policy — but it’s not clear that anything has changed in the decade-long stalemate in Congress on the issue.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Nevada Democrat, said Wednesday that he will insist the upper chamber hold votes on immigration legislation.
He called the issue “very, very high” on his to-do list, after Hispanics voted overwhelmingly for Mr. Obama on Tuesday.
Exit polls showed the president winning 71 percent of Hispanics, which is up from the 67 percent he won in 2008 in the rapidly expanding voter bloc. Basking in those numbers, immigration rights advocates said they are eager to collect the rewards of their support.
“It’s time for Latinos to cash their check for the Dream Act and for immigration reform,” said Cesar Vargas, who has applied for Mr. Obama’s nondeportation policy.
But he said the president’s victory likely will mean a flood of applications from other young adults who had waited, fearful that they would be judged by a less-lenient Romney administration than by Mr. Obama’s.
For the past decade, immigration has been stymied in Congress, including failed attempts in 2006 and 2007 with President Bush. Mr. Obama promised to take action during his first term, but instead tackled health care, the economy, climate change and financial regulations.
Facing re-election without having acted, he took unilateral steps in June by announcing that he no longer would deport most illegal immigrants 30 and younger who had steered clear of major criminal problems. The policy, known as “deferred action,” energized Hispanic voters on behalf of Mr. Obama — all the more so since Republican nominee Mitt Romney opposed the move.
Looking at Tuesday’s election, Frank Sharry, head of advocacy group America’s Voice, said the conclusion is clear: Democrats, some of whom had been reluctant to touch immigration for fear of political consequences, saw it as a major winner.
“Yesterday’s election basically said it’s a wedge issue for Democrats,” Mr. Sharry said. “Democrats are really starting to feel their oats on this issue: ‘If we lean into it, it mobilizes Latinos, swing voters actually like the leadership, and Republicans — it makes them divided.’”
All of that, plus Mr. Reid’s vow to hold votes with his expanded Democratic majority in the Senate, should mean major pressure for a Republican Party still trying to figure out how to rebuild a winning national majority in presidential elections.
But voters returned Republicans to a majority in the House, and there is little evidence that the chamber has moved closer to trying to pass the broad legalization bills that Democrats seek.
Kris W. Kobach, Kansas secretary of state and the co-architect of many state immigration-crackdown laws, said polling earlier this year shows independents liked Mr. Romney’s stand on immigration more than Mr. Obama’s.
He said he doesn’t see any way that House Republicans would accept an immigration bill that includes amnesty for illegal immigrants.
“The Democrats and Obama have been unyielding on that point — that they insist upon an amnesty, and Republicans rightly said ‘No, we’ll go along with a whole host of changes, but not ones that reward amnesty.’”
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Stephen Dinan can be reached at sdinan@washingtontimes.com.
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