Los Angeles Times (Editorial-California):
October 13, 2015
Frustrated
by the House's inaction on a bipartisan Senate bill that would have
overhauled the nation's immigration laws, President Obama gave a little
breathing room last
November to those here illegally who have set down roots and
established productive lives. Those executive actions would have held
off the deportation of more young people brought into the country as
children, while offering similar protections for the undocumented
parents of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents.
But
Obama's actions were put on hold in February by U.S. District Judge
Andrew S. Hanen in Brownsville, Texas, who issued an injunction sought
by 26 states that accused
the president of rewriting immigration law and failing to follow
required procedures. This page has said before that the states' legal
arguments aren't persuasive, and has urged the courts to move swiftly.
They haven't listened, and now Obama's executive actions
are withering not on their legal merits but because of the calendar.
The
Obama administration sought an emergency stay of Hanen's injunction,
which a three-judge panel of the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals —
among the nation's most conservative
benches — rejected by a 2-1 vote in May. The same panel heard oral
arguments on the government's full appeal July 10. According to the
court's website, its goal is to issue opinions within 60 days, which
observers say it usually meets on this type of case.
But it hasn't in this one, which was heard more than 90 days ago.
Why
does that matter? Because the underlying issue of whether the president
has the authority to protect classes of undocumented immigrants from
deportation, and to permit
them to work legally, probably will have to be resolved by the Supreme
Court. But to be heard in the current session, an appeal from the 5th
Circuit probably would need to be filed by Oct. 23, less than two weeks
from now. Otherwise, under the usual flow of
court business, the case won't get to the Supreme Court until the next
term, with no decision until after Obama leaves office. That would be
bad for those eligible for the deferred action, many of whom would have
qualified for a path to citizenship under the
reasonable 2013 Senate immigration reform bill, and may yet again if
Congress ever gets its act together.
Is
the 5th Circuit willfully slow-walking this decision with its eye on
the calendar? The court already considered the core arguments before
denying the emergency stay
in May. Or is the case really that complicated? Only the judges know.
Regardless, this is not how justice is reached. The 5th Circuit needs to
move this case along without delay. It would be unacceptable if the
president's executive actions are stalled not
because of a legitimate legal challenge but because the wheels of
justice turn too slowly.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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