Washington Post (Volokh Conspiracy)
By Jonathan H. Adler
May 26, 2015
Earlier
today a divided panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit denied the federal government’s application for a stay of a
district court injunction against implementation
of the Obama Administration’s recent immigration reforms. Put into
plain English: The lower court concluded that the plaintiff states were
likely to prevail in their challenge to the Administration’s new
immigration policies, and two of the three appellate
judges who heard the case agreed. The opinion is available here.
This
case arises out of a challenge brought by 26 states against the Obama
Administration’s controversial immigration reforms.
Although the ruling
below focused on procedural administrative
law issues – specifically whether the Administration was required to go
through an official notice-and-comment rulemaking process before
adopting this sort of policy — it certainly suggested that the judge
would side with the states on the merits of their
claims. Likewise today’s opinion, while keyed on the procedural
questions, appears quite sympathetic to the states’ underlying
arguments. Judge Smith wrote the majority opinion, joined by Judge
Elrod. Judge Higgonson dissented, arguing that the case is not
justiciable.
Today’s
decision leaves the Administration with a choice. It could seek
immediate en banc review of the panel’s decision before the full Fifth
Circuit, or it could seek Supreme
Court review. I suspect this decision will turn on where the Justice
Department believes it has the best shot, so don’t be surprised if this
case is heads to One First Street. The Justice Department also has the
option of simply waiting for a full hearing
in its appeal of the district court’s decision. Oral argument is
scheduled for July, but it will [could] be before the same panel, and
today’s decision gives a fairly good indication of how [at least some
on] the court is [are] likely to rule.
For more, Josh Blackman has extensive case excerpts and How Appealing rounds up early news coverage.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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