Los Angeles Times
By David Savage, Brian Bennett and Molly Hennessey Fiske
November 9, 2015
Federal
appeals court dealt a severe and possibly fatal blow Monday to
President Obama’s executive actions to allow up to 5 million immigrants
living illegally in the United
States to stay and obtain work permits.
The
decision by the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals may have come too
late for the administration to appeal to the Supreme Court and win a
reversal before Obama leaves
office.
In
a 2-1 decision, the appeals court sided with Texas and 25 other states
that had sued to block Obama’s programs, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, and
an extension of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA.
The
two judges ruled that Obama had “no statutory authority” to issue such
sweeping orders on immigration because they forced a change in
government regulations that did
not go through full and proper procedures.
“At
its core, this case is about the [administration’s] decision to change
the immigration classification of millions of illegal aliens on a
class-wide basis,” Judge Jerry
Smith said, joined by Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod.
Immigration
law “flatly does not permit the reclassification of millions of illegal
aliens as lawfully present and thereby make them newly eligible for a
host of federal
and state benefits, including work authorization,” the court concluded.
Half of immigrants in state illegally could be eligible for Medi-Cal expansion, study finds
The
administration’s lawyers fully expected to lose before the conservative
appeals court, based in New Orleans. The two judges had already
signaled they agreed with a
federal judge in Texas who first blocked Obama’s order.
But they took nearly five months to issue an opinion that ran to 135 pages, including the dissent.
Obama’s lawyers can now rush an appeal petition to the high court. Texas would then have 30 days to respond.
Only
then would the Supreme Court put the appeal on its list of cases to be
considered. And unless the justices have voted by mid-January to hear an
appeal, the case would
not be argued and decided in the term that ends next summer.
Cases taken up in February or later will not be decided until early in 2017 — after Obama has left the White House.
The
dissenting member of the appeals panel, Judge Carolyn Dineen King,
criticized her colleagues for the “extended delay that occurred in
deciding this ‘expedited’ appeal.”
“There is no justification for that delay,” she wrote.
The
Justice Department “is reviewing the opinion to determine how best to
proceed,” spokesman Patrick Rodenbush said in a statement.
The
department “is committed to taking steps that will resolve the
immigration litigation as quickly as possible in order ... 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.
Two
programs are at issue in the case. There’s an extension of DACA,
created in 2012, which allowed those brought into the United States
illegally as children to apply
for deportation deferrals and work permits. About 636,000 people have
been approved to take advantage of the plan.
There’s
also DAPA, which was scheduled to start in May. It would grant
three-year work permits and temporary protection from deportation to as
many as 4.3 million adults
who are parents of U.S. citizens or permanent residents and have lived
in the country for at least five years.
The
president announced the executive order in November. He insisted he was
not changing the law, but instead was granting a temporary suspension
of deportation to individuals
who have lived and worked in the United States for years.
But
lawyers for Texas, joined by other states, sued and said the
president’s “executive amnesty” amounted to an unauthorized change in
the law.
Texas
Gov. Greg Abbott hailed Monday’s decision as a “vindication for the
rule of the law and the Constitution. The president’s job is to enforce
the immigration laws,
not rewrite them.”
“Today,
the 5th Circuit asserted that the separation of powers remains the law
of the land, and the president must follow the rule of law, just like
everybody else,” said
Texas Atty. Gen. Ken Paxton, whose office includes the state solicitor
general who argued the case before the appeals court.
The
other plaintiffs are Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi,
Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North
Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin.
Immigration advocates were disappointed but not surprised by the ruling and urged the administration to appeal immediately.
“We’re
talking about millions of immigrant families. They’ve been waiting and
they live in fear every day of their lives of deportation,” said Nora
Preciado, staff attorney
with the National Immigration Law Center in Los Angeles, which filed a
brief in support of the federal government.
Angelica
Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights
of Los Angeles, called the 5th Circuit's decision “a direct example of
how politics bastardizes
justice.”
Salas
continued in a statement: “Today's ruling is a slap in the face to the
good people in America who have also been waiting for Congress and the
courts to act with
justice, humanity and common sense on the issue of immigration reform.”
The
appeals court ruling focused on two rather mundane legal issues —
whether Texas has standing to sue over the change in immigration policy
and whether Obama’s executive
action was a change in government regulations that required a “notice
and comment” from the public before it could take effect.
Texas
authorities argued they had standing because the state could be forced
to issue driver’s licenses to hundreds of thousands of people.
Judge Smith said the cost of the extra driver’s licenses was sufficient to get the state into court.
Lawmakers on both sides of the issue also weighed in.
“While
today’s ruling may be disappointing news to those still stuck in the
shadows, it is by no means a surprise,” said Sen. Robert Menendez
(D-N.J.), who has sought
to reform immigration laws. “The path is finally clear for the Supreme
Court to weigh in and confirm the legality of the expanded DACA and DAPA
programs.”
Republican
lawmakers applauded the court’s decision, saying it imposed appropriate
limits on what actions a sitting president can take without a change to
the immigration
laws by Congress.
“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,”
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Robert W. Goodlatte (R-Va.) said in a
statement.
“The
president himself stated over 20 times that he does not have the
authority to change immigration laws on his own yet he did so anyway,”
Goodlatte said.
Goodlatte
and other Republican lawmakers signed an amicus brief submitted to the
federal court in support of the states’ lawsuit to block Obama’s
executive actions on
immigration.
Jose
Palacios, whose family immigrated from Mexico to Tampa, Fla., when he
was a child, attended oral arguments earlier this year. He was
disheartened but not surprised
by the 5th Circuit’s ruling.
“I
didn’t expect them to come through for our community,” said Palacios,
23, who is protected by DACA. But he doesn’t know what to tell his
46-year-old mother, who would
be eligible for DAPA but instead is dependent on her children for
rides, unable to work and afraid to invest lest she be deported.
“Every
time this comes up I have to tell her, 'Don’t worry,’” he said. But
nearly a year after Obama's programs were announced, “I really can’t
look at her in the eye
and tell her not to worry, because I can’t tell how quick they’re going
to take it up, with how slow it’s been going.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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