Mother Jones
By Kevin Drum
January 21, 2016
As
you all know, the Supreme Court has agreed to rule on the legality of
President Obama's 2014 immigration program—Deferred Action for Parental Accountability, or DAPA.
Like DACA, the "mini-DREAM" rule that Obama established in 2012, DAPA
codifies the president's ability to direct prosecutorial resources by
explicitly telling immigration agents to do what they've mostly been
doing anyway: ignore undocumented immigrants who
have clean records and have been in the US for a long time. The key
word here is "mostly." Nearly all immigrants who fit the DAPA criteria
are left untouched, but immigration agents continue to randomly deport
some of them. Over at the New Republic, Spencer
Amdur makes an interesting argument that this is at the core of the
legal case:
As
the administration tries to rationalize its immigration policy, the
biggest challenge has actually come from within....In 2011, the head of
ICE, John Morton, issued
a memorandum directing agents not to focus their limited resources on
immigrants with clean records, long-time residence, and families in the
United States....Morton issued several of these “priorities” memos, and
line-level agents almost universally ignored
them, continuing to deport immigrants with deep roots here and no
convictions.
....Later
in 2011, the administration instructed immigration prosecutors to close
cases of people who were not priorities for deportation; little
changed. In 2012, the
administration asked agents to stop sending detention requests to local
police for immigrants without criminal records. Still nothing.
....This
pattern of defiance is not mentioned in any of the briefs or court
decisions in United States v. Texas. But it was an essential antecedent
for DAPA, which effectively
forces immigration agents to follow the previous policies....This is
the elephant in the courtroom. The lawsuit is not just about the balance
of power between the president and Congress, as the briefs suggest.
It’s about democratic control of the police. Do
our elected officials have the right to control the enforcement
bureaucracy?
The fact that this isn't mentioned in any of the briefs suggests it's not taken seriously by anyone. Should it be?
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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