Obongo Mondo Defends Invasion Plot

Daily Stormer
February 26, 2015

Yall muffugguhs bes bee gis ridy fer sum calur
Yall muffugguhs bes bee gis ridy fer sum calur

It is truly unbelievable that the people of this country have exactly no say in whether or not Obama does us like this.

VOA:

President Barack Obama raised the political pressure on the opposition over immigration Wednesday, telling members of Miami’s Latino community that Republicans were to blame for stalling the reform.

“For the next set of presidential candidates,” he told a town hall meeting hosted by the Spanish-language TV network Telemundo, “when they start asking for votes, the first question should be, ‘Are you really going to deport 11 million people? If not, what’s your plan?’ ”

Obama defended his plan to protect up to 5 million undocumented immigrants and said he disagreed with a federal judge in Texas who blocked his order from taking effect. The president said it could take months for an appeals court to overturn that ruling.

He said he remained confident that he was within his legal rights to protect such a broad group of undocumented immigrants, and he urged those who would qualify for the program to continue preparing their applications.

“Until we pass a law through Congress, the executive actions we’ve taken are not going to be permanent; they are temporary,” he said.

He said he would veto attempts by the GOP leadership to halt his executive orders through a funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security, which will run out of money Friday if no deal is struck.

In other Negro shenanigans news, we now have a new Negro Attorney General to replace our old Negro Attorney general.  Race was not a factor, we assure you.

USA Today:

The Senate Judiciary Committee voted Thursday to advance Loretta Lynch to be the nation’s next attorney general, overcoming Republican objections to her support of President Obama’s executive action on immigration.

Lynch’s committee approval, by a vote of 12-8, sets up final consideration by the full Senate.

The panel’s vote comes nearly a month after a confirmation hearing in which the 55-year-old career federal prosecutor promised to repair the Justice Department’s strained relationship with Congress and confront simmering racial tensions over law enforcement’s dealings in minority communities across the country.