There\u2019s been abundant rhetoric about the necessity for immigration reform. But according to Houston-area immigration lawyer Annie Banerjee, now may not be the time.<\/p>\n
On June 10, 2010, the \u201cone-party\u201d Health Care Bill was signed into law after being passed by the Democrats. While President Obama\u2019s determined attempt to achieve legislative success in a bipartisan manner is perhaps laudable and worthy of historic kudos, according to Annie Banerjee, a Houston-area immigration lawyer, it might have been \u201cmore strategically prudent\u201d to concede to Republican demands.<\/p>\n
\u201cHe refused to compromise with the Republicans, courted the Democrats, and rammed a bill down the throats of an unwilling population,\u201d asserts Banerjee, \u201cThat is not democracy. What will happen to that Health Care Bill is that Republicans will file a court challenge to it. The conservative Supreme Court will declare it unconstitutional. In the meantime, in October the makeup of the Senate and House will change and the (more…)<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" There\u2019s been abundant rhetoric about the necessity for immigration reform. But according to Houston-area immigration lawyer Annie Banerjee, now may not be the time. On June 10, 2010, the \u201cone-party\u201d Health Care Bill was signed into law after being passed…<\/span><\/p>\n