The Obama administration has been holding behind-the-scenes talks to
determine whether the Department of Homeland Security can unilaterally grant
legal status on a mass basis to illegal immigrants, a former Bush
administration official who spoke with at least three people involved in
those talks told FoxNews.com.

The issue was raised publicly by eight Republican senators who wrote to the
White House on Monday to complain that they had heard the administration was
readying a "Plan B" in case a comprehensive immigration reform bill cannot
win enough support to clear Congress.

The White House would not confirm or deny the claim. But the former Bush
official said the discussions are real.

"The administration at the very minimum is studying legal ways to legalize
people without having to go through any congressional debate about it," the
source said, calling the senators' claim credible. "Whether somebody pulls
the trigger on that, that's another issue."

The senators -- Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa; Orrin Hatch, R-Utah; David Vitter,
R-La.; Jim Bunning, R-Ky.; Saxby Chambliss, Ga.; Johnny Isakson, R-Ga.;
James Inhofe, R-Okla.; and Thad Cochran, R-Miss. -- claimed in their letter
that the administration was looking at extending what is known as deferred
action or parole to millions of illegal aliens in the United States.

The former official said it's unclear what specific avenues the
administration is considering, but that one potentially feasible option
would be to use either deferred action or parole to legalize at once the
millions of immigrants who have overstayed their visas -- not necessarily
those who crossed the border illegally.

Deferred action and parole would give illegal immigrants the ability to seek
a work permit and temporary legal status.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/06/24/source-administration-weighing-unilateral-legalization-illegal-immigrants/

Those two tools are usually used on a case-by-case basis. The former
official said any move to broaden that authority and use it on a mass basis
would be "woefully inappropriate," though politically brilliant.

The Republican senators who wrote to President Obama expressed a similar
view. They wrote that any unilateral action would "further erode the
American public's confidence in the federal government and its commitment to
securing the borders and enforcing the laws already on the books."

The discussions of blanket legalization come in the middle of several
concurrent and heated debates over illegal immigration. The recently signed
immigration law in Arizona has divided the country, with some states trying
to replicate the state's tough legislation and other jurisdictions
boycotting the state in protest. The Obama administration plans to file a
court challenge.

Democrats, meanwhile, have been trying to round up support for an overhaul
bill in Congress.

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