Los Angeles Times
By David G. Savage
March 8, 2016
Across
section of California leaders in business, education, law enforcement
and religion joined Tuesday in urging the Supreme Court to uphold
President Obama's
plan to offer temporary relief and work permits to as many as 5 million
immigrants who have been living in the U.S. illegally.
They
drew a sharp contrast with Texas, which has complained of the burden
imposed by immigrants and led the legal fight to block Obama's executive
action.
The
California leaders told the court the undocumented immigrants who are
working and raising families are making the state stronger, better and
more prosperous.
About one-fourth of the nation's undocumented immigrants live in
California, they said.
"Representing
just 7% of the state's population, [they] make up 34% of its farm
workers, 22% of its production workers and 21% of its construction
workers
according to one estimate," they said in a friend-of-the court brief.
Some
estimates say as many as 60% of California's farmworkers are
undocumented, they added. "Today, the undocumented workforce alone
contributes $130 billion
to California's gross domestic product (GDP) — an amount larger than
the entire respective GDPs of 19 other states."
Immigrants
also have helped maintain Los Angeles as "the largest manufacturing
center in the United States, far outpacing other manufacturing centers
like
Chicago, Detroit or Philadelphia."
"It's
easy to get caught up in the white-hot political debate over this
issue," said Jot Condie, chief executive of the California Restaurant
Assn. "But for
us, this simply comes down to people — our fellow churchgoers,
classmates, neighbors and hard-working individuals. Millions of loving
families hang in the balance. Kicking the can on immigration reform can
no longer be an option."
Obama's
stalled program, called Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, would
offer relief from the threat of deportation and a work permit to about
1.1
million Californians who are parents of legal children. The brief cites
a UCLA study that estimates this program, if put into effect, "would
generate 130,000 new jobs in California alone, increase the collective
wages of undocumented immigrants in California
by more than $5.5 billion annually and support public programs with
$3.8 billion in new business, personal and sales tax receipts annually."
The
Supreme Court, with only eight justices, will hear arguments April 18
in the immigration case now called United States vs. Texas.
It
began when Texas and more than two dozen other Republican-led states
filed suit in Brownsville, Texas, contending Obama did not have the
legal authority
to defer deportation to a large group of immigrants. The judge agreed
Obama's plan appeared to be illegal, and he issued an order that
prevents it from taking effect. The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld
the judge's order by a 2-1 vote.
Obama's
lawyers appealed, arguing first that Texas does not have standing to
sue. The president's order does not regulate the state, they say.
Moreover, immigration
enforcement is a matter for the federal government. They also argue
that the U.S. immigration laws give the executive branch broad leeway in
deciding whom to deport.
Texas
lawyers responded by arguing the president had violated this
constitutional duty to "faithfully" execute the laws. On Jan. 19, the
court agreed to consider
that issue, potentially turning the case into a landmark test of
presidential power.
But
the death of Justice Antonin Scalia on Feb. 13 all but ended that
prospect. Without Scalia, the court's conservatives will not have a
majority to write
an opinion that broadly rejects Obama's executive action.
However,
Obama's lawyers cannot win without at least one of the justices who
leans to the right, either Chief Justice John G. Roberts or Justice
Anthony M.
Kennedy. Both joined in a 2012 opinion that rejected key parts of an
Arizona immigration law that authorized local police to stop people and
check their citizenship.
If
the justices were to split evenly, the tie vote would affirm the 5th
Circuit's decision preventing Obama's order from taking effect.
California
Attorney Gen. Kamala Harris filed a separate friend-of-the-court brief
Tuesday in support of the administration that was joined by her
counterparts
in 15 Democratic-leaning states. She called Obama's order as a "common
sense action on immigration, which will allow millions of hard-working
immigrants to come out of the shadows, contribute to the prosperity of
this nation and build the American dream."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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