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White House spells out impact automatic budget cuts would have on US

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President Barack Obama speaks to the National Governors Association in the State Dining room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on February 25, 2013. (Pool photo by Dennis Brack/Black Star via Abaca Press/MCT)

(MCT) — WASHINGTON — Planes delayed. Teachers laid off. And, now, more illegal immigrants slipping past the Border Patrol.

The White House on Monday added to its list of dire consequences that would come from Friday’s automatic federal budget cuts, part of a campaign to ignite public outcry.

For days, President Barack Obama and his aides have been turning up the volume about the impact of the across-the-board cuts, seeking to gain leverage over Republicans in Washington’s latest fiscal fight.

On Monday, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano predicted longer lines at U.S. border crossings and a more porous border. “Between the ports of entry, if you reduce the number of Border Patrol agents, I think you can say, yes, it does affect our ability to keep out illegal migrants and others trying to enter the country,” Napolitano told reporters at the White House.

The warnings came as the White House distributed a state-by-state analysis of the impact to governors in Washington for their annual meeting. On Tuesday, Obama will travel to Newport News, Va., a shipbuilding hub already feeling an economic impact as the Pentagon delays work on an aircraft carrier.

As he has in past battles with Republicans in Congress, the president hopes public pressure will push his GOP opponents to compromise. In fights over tax rates, payroll taxes and student loans, Obama has succeeded in using that pressure — and his bully pulpit — to force Republicans to bend.

In the latest standoff, in which automatic cuts would gradually curb federal services, Obama is having to work harder to alert the public to the problem, mindful that his bet could backfire. If the budget ax falls and nobody notices, Republicans may have made their case for reducing federal spending.

Republicans, meanwhile, have adopted the strategy of blaming the administration for making the wrong cuts.

After meeting with Obama, some Republican governors questioned whether the president is engaging in scare tactics. “It’s time for the president to show leadership,” Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said. “Enough’s enough. There is room to make the cuts without jeopardizing critical services.”

Congressional Republicans complained Monday that the cuts should target wasteful or duplicative programs — or follow their proposals to trim domestic programs, including school lunches and food stamps.

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