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Obama says he will fight and stand for immigration reform

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President Barack Obama speaks Friday at The National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials' Annual Conference at the Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP photo)

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. – President Barack Obama on Friday tailored his economic message to the Hispanic voters who could help swing the election, saying he would build up middle-class opportunity for Latinos while Republican rival Mitt Romney would gut it with “top-down economics” favoring only the rich.

“These are all our kids,” Obama declared as the nation’s first black president lobbied for support in strikingly personal terms.

When he meets young people of different backgrounds, Obama said, “I see myself.”

“Who knows what they might achieve if we just give them a chance?” the president asked. “That’s what I’m fighting for. That’s what I stand for.”

Obama spoke to the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials near Orlando, his first speech to a Hispanic group since he decreed that many young illegal immigrants brought to the United States as children would be exempted from deportation and granted work permits valid for two years.

He defended that decision as “the right thing to do” while conceding it was only a temporary patch. Romney attacked it as a “stopgap measure” in his own speech to the association one day earlier as both men, locked in a tight battle, courted voters from a Hispanic population growing in size and influence.

Obama challenged Republicans in Congress to join him finally on a big, broad fix of the U.S. immigration laws.

“To those who are saying Congress should be the one to fix this, absolutely,” Obama said. “For those who say we should do this in a bipartisan fashion, absolutely. My door has been open for three and a half years. They know where to find me.”

Hispanic voters are a vital constituency in states that could swing the election, from Florida to Nevada to Virginia.

The president said the nation needs ideas and policies that build up the middle class and “our current immigration system doesn’t reflect those values.” The system punishes immigrants who play by the rules and drives away entrepreneurs who can get an education in America but cannot stay here legally, he said.

Obama has faced heat from his own Hispanic supporters for not having fulfilled a pledge to deliver a comprehensive immigration overhaul deal. Obama has, in turn, pointed blame at Republicans for blocking him. He said anew on Friday that as long as he is president “he will not give up the fight” on a broad fix. And he made another pitch for legislation called the DREAM Act that would create a path to citizenship for some children of illegal immigrants.

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