Some Republicans say the House speaker has declared his support for amnesty by hiring the Bipartisan Policy Center's Rebecca Tallent.
The House Judiciary committee spent one day hearing claims that Obama may be acting outside the law and may be overthrown.
Kevin McCarthy, majority whip and third-ranking House Republican, recently said that immigration reform won't get a vote because of a time crunch.
Republicans are going after the president for not faithfully executing laws, a strategy that dovetails the two issues.
They say it's not doomsday yet, but some business owners worry the immigration stalemate may impact innovation.
Advocates continue to push for their goal, despite Speaker Boehner saying he has no intention of conferencing the House and Senate immigration bills.
Optimists say immigration reform may happen in 2014 if not this year. But some say its chances of happening are nil in either case.
Republicans maintain there is little time left this year, but advocates say the House can pass reform if it wants to.
UBS economist Paul Donovan explains exactly how the financial crisis may have sparked anti-immigration sentiment in Europe and America.
Gov. Jerry Brown signed the Trust Act into law Saturday as rallies across the country call for immigration reform.
Pelosi plans to combine a Senate judiciary bill with a House border security bill still in the making, but it has little support.
The Democratic leader encourages lawmakers to cancel recess and add immigration to the issues to resolve now.
Advocates say Syria and budget negotiations are no excuse to push immigration reform to the back burner.
Young Republicans are offering advice on how win national elections. Hint: Some believe in the art of compromise.
Undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children got a reprieve. Now they want Obama to expand the program to everybody.
Frustrated with Congress' foot-dragging, immigration advocates call on the president to suspend deportation and expand "deferred action."
More than 700,000 immigrants were naturalized as U.S. citizens in 2012.
People who wield influence in Republican circles think immigration reform should follow along the lines of what the Senate has already done.
When they return from August recess, Republicans will have just 9 legislative days to figure out a plan to fund the U.S. government.
Even during the summer recess, some Republicans won't escape immigration reform. Democrats are taking the fight to their districts.
Backing immigration reform doesn't guarantee Latinos will switch to Republicans, but it keeps the GOP in the national race.
The percentage of people who want more immigrants is growing, but still nowhere near 50 percent.