Associated Press
By Jacques Billeaud
September 30, 2014
PHOENIX
(AP) — The Obama administration has urged a court to reject Arizona
Gov. Jan Brewer's appeal of a ruling that blocks the state from denying
driver's licenses to
young immigrants who have avoided deportation under a change ordered by
the president.
Lawyers
for the U.S. Justice Department told the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
in a filing Tuesday that the state policy is trumped by federal law.
They argued the state
won't accept documents issued to the immigrants in question as proof of
their legal presence in the country, yet it continues to accept such
records from other immigrants.
"The
state has failed to identify any reason why the same documents should
not similarly suffice for plaintiffs," the Justice Department said in a
friend-of-the-court
brief filed in a lawsuit by young immigrants who challenged the policy.
The
federal government didn't challenge the driver's license policy, but it
was asked by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to offer input on the
case. In July, a three-judge
panel of the court blocked the driver's license policy and suggested
the rules were intended to express hostility toward the young
immigrants.
The
governor is now asking for a 15-judge panel to reconsider the ruling.
The Obama administration said no such review is warranted.
Brewer spokesman Andrew Wilder said in a statement that the filing demonstrates how lawless the Obama administration has become.
"Rather
than secure U.S. borders or enforce existing federal immigration laws,
the Obama administration continues to afford preference and privileges
to people who enter
our country illegally and whose presence is unauthorized," Wilder said.
"States, not the Obama administration, have the right to determine who
is issued a driver's license."
The Justice Department declined to comment.
The
Obama administration also chimed in on Tuesday on another Arizona
immigration policy by urging a judge to throw out the state's 2005
immigrant smuggling ban. The federal
government argues the state smuggling law is trumped by a similar
federal law, while Brewer's attorneys contend there is no such conflict
with federal law.
Brewer
and the Obama administration have clashed over illegal immigration
before, most notably in a federal challenge seeking to throw out
Arizona's 2010 immigration law,
SB1070.
In
that case, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the law's most contentious
section, requiring police to question, while enforcing other laws, the
immigration status of people
suspected of being in the country illegally. Other parts, such as a
requirement that immigrants carry registration, were struck down.
The
state driver's license policy was a reaction to steps the Obama
administration took in June 2012 to shield thousands of immigrants from
deportation and expand their
legal rights. About 580,000 people have been approved to take part in
the program, including about 20,000 in Arizona.
Brewer
issued an executive order in August 2012 directing state agencies to
deny driver's licenses and other public benefits to young immigrants who
get work authorization
under the program.
Immigrant-rights
advocates argued that the state let some immigrants with work permits
get driver's licenses, but it wouldn't let immigrants protected under
Obama's program
have the same benefit.
The
state revised the policy last year by saying it would stop issuing
driver's licenses to all people who receive deportation deferrals from
the federal government, not
just young immigrants given protection under Obama's policy. The
governor's attorneys argued the revision makes the young immigrants'
equal-protection arguments moot.
Brewer's
attorneys have contended the decision to deny driver's licenses grew
out of liability concerns and the desire to reduce the risk of the
licenses being used to
improperly access public benefits.
Lawyers
who sought to overturn the policy said the rule change made it
difficult or impossible for such young immigrants to do essential things
in their everyday lives,
such as going to school, going to the grocery store and finding and
holding a job.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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