New York Times
By Julie Hirshfield Davis
Obama’s Immigration Decision Has Precedents, but May Set a New OneNovember 20, 2014
President
Obama’s action to shield millions of undocumented immigrants from
deportation and grant them work permits opens a new front in the
decades-long debate over the scope of presidential
authority.
Although
Mr. Obama is not breaking new ground by using executive powers to carve
out a quasi-legal status for certain categories of unauthorized
immigrants — the Republican Presidents Dwight
D. Eisenhower, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush all did so — his
decision will affect as many as five million immigrants, far more than
the actions of those presidents.
Mr. Obama’s action is also a far more extensive reshaping of the nation’s immigration system.
“The
magnitude and the formality of it is arguably unprecedented,” said
Peter J. Spiro, a Temple University law professor. “It’s fair to say
that we have never seen anything quite like this
before in terms of the scale."
The
breadth of Mr. Obama’s decision is already raising serious legal and
constitutional questions, fueling Republican charges of imperial
overreach and worries among some Democrats of future
fallout.
In
an acknowledgment of the difficult questions of law and executive power
Mr. Obama is raising with his action, the White House took the unusual
step Thursday night of releasing the formal,
33-page Justice Department memo detailing the action’s legal
underpinnings. Such internal legal opinions are seldom revealed to the
public.
The
memo, White House officials and a broad array of legal experts assert
that the president’s directive, announced Thursday night in a prime-time
address to the nation, rests on firm legal
ground.
As
chief executive, they say, Mr. Obama has virtually unfettered
“prosecutorial discretion” to decide when he will prosecute criminal
infractions and when he will not.
They
also say that because Congress does not appropriate nearly enough money
to deport all of the 11 million undocumented immigrants estimated to be
living in the United States, the president
is obligated to choose whom he deports, so he cannot reasonably be
accused of usurping lawmakers’ authority or failing to execute the law.
“The
key is that the president’s actions will still leave millions of
undocumented immigrants to go after, and that will be with resources
appropriated by Congress that still make barely a
dent in the remaining population,” said Stephen H. Legomsky, a
Washington University law school professor who was chief counsel of the
United States Citizenship and Immigration Services from 2011 to 2013.
Still,
some lawyers critical of Mr. Obama argue that by publicly grouping a
large number of undocumented immigrants who are not subject to American
law and granting them a special status,
the president has gone far beyond the limits of prosecutorial
discretion and crossed the line into legislative fiat.
“This
action certainly looks a lot more like, ‘I’m changing the rules of the
game,’ rather than ‘I’m just choosing not to exercise my discretion,’
and that runs counter to Congress’s power
to decide what the law is,” said Shannen W. Coffin, who in the George
W. Bush administration was a Justice Department lawyer and then counsel
to Vice President Dick Cheney. “It’s highly questionable as a
constitutional matter.”
As
the chief executive, Mr. Coffin added, the president has a duty to
enforce the law, and while declining to do so may not be
unconstitutional in every case, “at some point when you’re doing
it en masse, you’re doing something very damaging.”
Previous
presidents who used their executive authority to shield undocumented
immigrants confronted little of the fury that Mr. Obama now faces, in
part because their actions affected fewer
people and the issue was not as polarizing at the time.
“Back
in the 1980s, immigration was controversial, but there was a bipartisan
consensus that we had to reform immigration laws,” said Stephen W.
Yale-Loehr, who teaches immigration law at
Cornell University.
In
1986, Mr. Reagan signed the so-called amnesty bill passed by Congress
that granted legal status to three million undocumented immigrants, and
then acted on his own the following year to
expand it to about 100,000 more. That action extended the amnesty to
immigrants who had left the country and then used fraudulent documents
to be readmitted, and shielded from deportation minor children whose
parents qualified.
Mr.
Bush moved in 1990 to allow 1.5 million undocumented spouses and
children of immigrants who were in the process of becoming legal permanent residents to stay in the country and obtain
work permits. At the time, that amounted to about 40 percent of the
immigrants living without documentation in the United States. Mr.
Obama’s order would affect about 45 percent of the undocumented
immigrants.
The
numbers matter because legal scholars say a president’s discretionary
power on immigration is not unlimited. Were he to refuse to deport any
immigrants, Mr. Obama could open himself to
a constitutional challenge that he was failing to live up to his duty
to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.”
“There
are limits, but we are well within those,” a senior administration
official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to publicly detail the legal underpinnings
of the policy. He declined to specify what the limits were.
The
announcement on Thursday was the latest presidential grant of deferred
action, a concept in immigration law that was also the basis for Mr. Obama’s 2012 directive granting two-year deportation reprieves to undocumented immigrants younger than 30 who had been brought to the United States as children and had graduated from high school or joined the military.
The
president’s new policy expands that 2012 order by removing the age
limit and applying it to anyone brought to the United States as a child
before 2010. But Mr. Obama declined to include
the parents of those immigrants, after administration lawyers concluded
that doing so would exceed his authority.
David
A. Martin, a University of Virginia law professor who was a counsel at
the Department of Homeland Security in 2009 and 2010, said that beyond
the question of whether Mr. Obama was staying
within the bounds of his power, the bigger problem for the future was
one of precedent. Even if his directive is legally defensible, Mr.
Martin said, Mr. Obama may be paving the way for future Republican
presidents to act in similarly sweeping ways to contravene
laws that Democrats cherish.
“It is problematic if presidents can just make major inroads in programs that Congress has enacted and funded,” he said.
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