Obama suggested in a pair of interviews that the ideological gap is narrowing between the Democrats and Republicans on the issue of overhaul of immigration laws, signaling that he is open to a middle-ground agreement with Republicans to achieve a far-reaching deal this year.
Obama said for the first time that he might accept a deal that would offer the 11 million undocumented immigrants in the US legal status instead of full citizenship.
House Speaker John Boehner and other Republican leaders had floated just such a proposal last Thursday.
Until now, Obama and other Democrats insisted that any compromise on immigration reform contain a path to full citizenship.
Anything short of that, they said, would create a two- tiered class system.
The plan Boehner outlined on Thursday is "moving in the direction of the principles that I have laid out," Obama said.
"There are still some differences. Obviously, the devil is in the details, but it is my firm belief that we can get immigration reform done this year," he said in an online video chat.
In an interview with CNN, Obama said that if Boehner were to pursue a plan that ended the deportation of most illegal immigrants and allowed them to pursue citizenship under existing channels, "I'm not sure how wide the divide ends up being" with Democratic proposals.
Obama's remarks represented a shift from the administration's hard-line stance that most illegal immigrants must receive a more direct and faster route to citizenship, reflected in the 13-year path included in a bipartisan Senate bill approved last summer, the Washington Post reported.
Latino and Asian American advocates for immigration reform, who overwhelmingly supported Obama's reelection bid in 2012, have long pressed the White House to stand firm on that point.
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