President Barack Obama's plan to protect from
deportation an estimated 5 million people living in the United States
illegally has suffered another setback in court.
In a 2-1 decision, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans
upheld a Texas-based judge's injunction blocking the Obama
administration's immigration initiative.
The ruling issued Monday further dims prospects of implementation of the
executive action. It may may mean the administration will not be able
to bring its appeal to the Supreme Court before Obama leaves office in
2017.
Appeals over the injunction could take months and, depending on how the
case unfolds, it could go back to the Texas federal court for more
proceedings.
Republicans had criticized the plan as an illegal executive overreach
when Obama announced it last November. Twenty-six states challenged the
plan in court.
The administration argued that the executive branch was within its
rights in deciding to defer deportation of selected groups of
immigrants, including children who were brought to the U.S. illegally.
On Monday evening, the White House said in a statement that it strongly
disagreed with the court and that the departments of Justice and
Homeland Security will review the ruling to determine the "next steps"
in the case.
"The Supreme Court and Congress have made clear that the federal
government can set priorities in enforcing our immigration laws," the
statement read. "This lawsuit is preventing people who have been part of
our communities for years from working on the books, contributing to
our economy by paying taxes on that work, and being held accountable."
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott who, backed by 25 other states, filed a lawsuit
citing the economic burden Obama’s action would impose on their state
governments, praised the ruling issued late Monday.
"President Obama should abandon his lawless executive amnesty program
and start enforcing the law today," Abbott said in a news release.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) said in a
statement that “President Obama’s decision to ignore the limits placed
on his power and act unilaterally to rewrite our nation’s immigration
laws is an affront to the Constitution.”
The administration could ask for a re-hearing by the full 5th Circuit
but the National Immigration Law Center, an advocacy group, urged an
immediate Supreme Court appeal.
"The most directly impacted are the 5 million U.S. citizen children
whose parents would be eligible for temporary relief from deportation,"
Marielena Hincapie, executive director of the organization, said in a
news release. She called on the Department of Justice "to seek Supreme
Court review immediately, where we are more likely to obtain justice for
our communities."
Nora Adriana Preciado, a litigator with the National Immigration Law
Center, told the Los Angeles Times that if the Supreme Court takes the
case, advocates plan to press them to expedite it.
"It's a case of national importance: We're talking about 26 states suing
the federal government and almost 5 million people affected," she told
the Times. "We're hopeful the Supreme Court will come down on the right
side of this case."
Justice Department spokesman Patrick Rodenbush said in a statement they
were reviewing the opinion to determine how best to proceed.
"The department is committed to taking steps that will resolve the
immigration litigation as quickly as possible in order to allow DHS
(Department of Homeland Security) to bring greater accountability to our
immigration system by prioritizing the removal of the worst offenders,
not people who have long ties to the United States and who are raising
American children," he said.
Part of the initiative included expansion of a program called Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals, protecting young immigrants from
deportation if they were brought to the U.S. illegally as children.
The other major part, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans (DAPA),
would extend deportation protections to parents of U.S. citizens and
permanent residents who have been in the country for years.
The 70-page majority opinion by Judge Jerry Smith, joined by Jennifer
Walker Elrod, rejected administration arguments that the district judge
abused his discretion with a nationwide order and that the states lacked
standing to challenge Obama's executive orders.
They acknowledged an argument that an adverse ruling would discourage
potential beneficiaries of the plan from cooperating with law
enforcement authorities or paying taxes. "But those are burdens that
Congress knowingly created, and it is not our place to second-guess
those decisions," Smith wrote.
In a 53-page dissent, Judge Carolyn Dineen King said the administration
was within the law, casting the decision to defer action on some
deportations as "quintessential exercises of prosecutorial discretion,"
and noting that the Department of Homeland Security has limited
resources.
"Although there are approximately 11.3 million removable aliens in this
country today, for the last several years Congress has provided the
Department of Homeland Security with only enough resources to remove
approximately 400,000 of those aliens per year," King wrote.
Obama issued the executive action granting an estimated 5 million
undocumented parents of U.S. citizen children temporary relief from
deportation in last November.
The initial euphoria in the wake of DAPA was quickly extinguished. After
a Texas-based federal judge blocked the action in February, the Obama
administration attempted to persuade an appeals court to lift the
injunction.
Legal scholars say the Obama administration should have issued a
longer-lasting formal regulation also known as a substantive rule, which
would have protected immigrants from deportation, as opposed to a
policy, which makes protection from deportation more of a privilege — a
privilege that experts say can more easily be abolished.
Furthermore, analysts say, the administration should have more finely
characterized who will benefit from deportation relief, and how broadly
that relief is defined.
According to immigration lawyers, this amounts to a strategic error that
may come to define Obama’s immigration legacy — one already marred by
the fact that the government has deported more than 2 million people
during the Obama administration
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