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Associated Press

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) - President Barack Obama, in a strikingly personal appeal, renewed his call for an overhaul of America's immigration laws before a supportive Latino audience Friday. He portrayed rival Mitt Romney as an obstacle to measures that would give young illegal immigrants a path to citizenship.

"These are all our kids," he declared.

To a standing ovation, Obama spoke of his directive last week that immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children be exempted from deportation and granted work permits if they applied.

Reflecting on his own life as the first African-American president, he said: "When I meet these young people, all throughout communities, I see myself. Who knows what they might achieve? I see my daughters, and my nieces, and my nephews."

"That's the promise that draws so many talented, driven people to these shores. That's the promise that drew my own father here," said Obama, whose father was Kenyan.

Obama spoke to the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, gathered on the sprawling grounds of Disney World, his first speech to a Hispanic group since he announced the new deportation policy. Romney spoke to the group on Thursday, underscoring the importance of the growing Hispanic vote and the influence it could have this election year in swing states from Nevada to Colorado to Florida to Virginia.

Obama's address also illustrated his own challenge in meeting an earlier campaign pledge.

Four years ago, before the same Latino leaders group, Obama vowed to make changing the nation's immigration system and taking steps to legalize millions of illegal immigrants a priority he would "pursue from my very first day."

Though hardly single-minded in their approach to politics, most Hispanics have been voting Democratic in recent elections. Obama has risked losing some support in part because Hispanics have been hard hit by the weak economy. What's more, Latino leaders have also grown frustrated with Obama because he failed to deliver on his 2008 pledge and because his administration was deporting illegal immigrants in record numbers.

On Friday, Obama blamed the lack of broader changes on Republicans who once supported adjustments to immigration law and "have been driven away from the table by a small faction of their own party."

He noted that Romney during the Republican primaries said he would veto legislation, known as the DREAM Act, that would give a path to citizenship to young immigrants who came to the United States illegally as children but have since attended school or served in the military.

"He has promised to veto the DREAM Act and we should take him at his word," he said,

It was lack of action on the DREAM Act- the Development, Relief and Education of Alien Minors Act- that led him to take the administrative steps he did last week to defer deportation for some young illegal immigrants and give them work permits instead, he said.

"It falls short of where we need to be, a path to citizenship," he said. "It's not a permanent fix. It's a temporary measure that lets us focus our resources wisely while offering some justice to these young people."

The directive could benefit anywhere between 800,000 to 1.4 million immigrants. On Friday, the Department of Homeland Security said it has found 823 cases in the backlog of deportation cases that will qualify for closure under Obama's new rule, making them eligible for work permits. The department said it expects to identify thousands more cases in the coming weeks.

Romney on Thursday assailed Obama's action as merely a "stopgap measure" in his own speech to the association, backing off the tough anti-illegal immigration rhetoric of the Republican primaries. He promised to address illegal immigration "in a civil but resolute manner."

Obama spoke about two hours after Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who has been promoting a plan that would have dealt with young illegal immigrants in a similar fashion to what Obama accomplished administratively.

Rubio, a possible running mate for Romney, said the issue had been politicized and neither side wanted to solve it because it was a more powerful political tool if left to fester.

"I was accused of supporting apartheid," Rubio said. "I was accused of supporting a DREAM Act without a dream. Of course, a few months later the president takes a similar idea and implements it through executive action and now it's the greatest idea in the world."

Rubio said, "This issue is all about politics to some people. Not just Democrats, Republicans." Romney has said he was studying Rubio's proposal but has not endorsed it.

Obama tailored his usual economic message to Hispanic voters, saying he would build up-middle class opportunity for Latinos while Romney would hurt it with "top-down economics" favoring the rich.

Romney's camp responded Friday by issuing statements from a number of prominent Hispanic leaders who said Obama's economic policies would hurt Hispanic businesses. In one typical reaction, Republican Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida said Obama was changing the subject to avoid having to discuss the economy.

"The Hispanic community values entrepreneurship and family-owned businesses, and we deserve a leader in Washington who is dedicated to creating an environment where our values, our goals and our dreams of prosperity can become reality," he said.

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Associated Press writers Brendan Farrington in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., and Alicia Caldwell and Ken Thomas in Washington contributed to this report.

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Follow Jim Kuhnhenn on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/jkuhnhenn


(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    Gilbert
    Did Obama not pander to certain women and Hispanics with his proposals and actions? Don't pretent to think that pandering only happens on the Right. We've seen plenty of evidence from Obama within the last 3 1/2 hours of what he will do for certain groups of people and friends.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    After coming to terms
    with the limited scope of what he can realistically expect to accomplish as president, Barack Obama announced Wednesday a new, more practical campaign slogan that will serve as the cornerstone for his 2012 reelection bid: "I Have Big Ideas But We'll See How It Goes."
  • Abuse
    The Big Truth wrote...
    Mitt the anchor baby
    Doesn't Mitt's comments seem kinda ironic considering that he is an 'anchor baby' himself? Just sayin.....
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    Obama
    is sure spouting this.....after almost 4 years of not addressing....now that it is critical to his re election.
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    what about the first 2 years?
    when he had complete control of the congress? he didn't have to "fight" for anything then, he just got it. why didn't he take of this then?! oh yeah, it wasn't an election year.
  • Abuse
    Navigator1 wrote...
    Then why
    didn't he do it during the first two years of his reign when he had Democrat majorities in both houses of Congress?? (Absolute silence)
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    Republicans want amnesty
    Republicans have always been weak on ILLEGAL immigration. Reagan gave them amnesty. More ILLEGALS have been deported under Obama than under Bush. What part of ILLEGAL don't you Republicans understand? Vote all ILLEGAL loving Republicans out of office!
  • Abuse
    Solitaire wrote...
    Bye To Socilism It Allows for No Growth
    He has abused the system and come the election he will be gone. Nothing but a dictator and the Hispanic that are Americans or became so the right way know that already.
  • Abuse
    No more war wrote...
    Obama's got it on Nov 6th...
    He will easily get re-elected on Nov 6th. I am not worried at all. Sorry, not fallin' forthe far-right rhetoric & lies, esp coming from the right-wing. Jan Brewer is a total joke & an embarrassment to this state. She is senile & needs to step down. OBAMA 2012!
    --> Listen to: 1480 AM, KPHX!...The Valley's Progressive Talk Radio for Phoenix!
  • Abuse
    gilbert armenta wrote...
    ...
    Minute - Latinos, legal and illegal alike, are already treated like second class citizens, not sure what you're getting at. Steve - what you see as pander i see as deliver. Is it a full delivery, no. The difference is when republicans reach out like this to hispanics it's all but laughable. That's not to say democrats don't pander, of course they do. Just so happens that the last two elections saw a need to get in touch with women and hispanics so that's what republicans did. I would have had more respect for them if they'd sayed true to form and shunned their brown caucus and ignored women.

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