Supreme Court Will Hear Case on Obama Administration's Immigration Actions
The
case, brought by Texas and 25 other states, challenges President Barack
Obama's attempt to give legal status and work authorizations to more
than 4 million illegal immigrants.
On Tuesday
morning, the Supreme Court announced that it will hear a case brought
by Texas and 25 other states challenging President Barack Obama’s
attempt to give legal status and work authorizations to more than four
million illegal immigrants.
In
a brief order, the Supreme Court directed the government and the states
to address whether the Obama administration’s program “violates the
Take Care Clause of the Constitution.”
The Programs in Question
In
2012, the administration created the Deferred Action of Childhood
Arrivals program, enabling 1.7 million illegal aliens under 30 years old
brought to the U.S. as children to apply for work authorization and
deferred deportation. A deferred action is relief from deportation or
removal proceedings that can be granted by the Department of Homeland
Security.
Then,
in 2014, this program was expanded by, among other things, eliminating
the age cap and increasing the term of deferred action and employment
authorization from two to three years.
The
administration also created Deferred Action for Parents of Americans,
conferring deferred action on illegal aliens whose children are U.S.
citizens or lawful permanent residents, provided no other factors make
deferred action inappropriate.
In
addition to lawful presence, Deferred Action for Parents of Americans
grants deferred action recipients benefits such as work authorizations,
driver’s licenses, Social Security, and other government benefits,
costing an estimated $324 million over the next three years, according
to the district court.
Federal Appeals Court Ruled in Favor of States
Last November, a federal appeals court ruled in favor of the states,
finding that they were likely to succeed on the merits of their claims
that the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans program violated the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
The
states argued that this program violates the APA’s notice-and-comment
requirement as well as the Take Care Clause of the Constitution. Since
they bear the brunt of the financial burden of this program, the lower
court ruled that they had standing to sue.
The
federal appeals court did not rule on whether the Obama administration
violated the Constitution in promulgating the Deferred Action for
Parents of Americans program (which is what the Supreme Court today
instructed the parties to address). The Court will also consider whether
the administration complied with the APA.
The Constitutional Issue
Article II of
the Constitution charges the president with the duty to carry out the
law—to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” Contrary to
what some more ambitious presidents would have us believe, this was
meant to constrain the executive’s power. It’s a duty that includes
complying with statutory mandates, enforcing laws and regulations
(including prosecuting lawbreakers), and defending the validity of laws
in court.
Exercise of Prosecutorial Discretion?
The
Obama administration has argued that its Deferred Action for Parents of
Americans program is merely an exercise of prosecutorial discretion—the
policy that the executive enjoys wide discretion in how to execute the
law so it may prioritize the use of law enforcement resources and decide
not to enforce a particular law against a particular individual or
small category of individuals on a case-by-case basis.
But
the Obama administration’s decision not to deport (and further to grant
status and benefits to) an estimated 4 million illegal aliens and to
call this “prosecutorial discretion” stretches that limited policy too far.
Courts
tend to be reluctant to say the president has abused his discretion or
crossed the line into abdicating a constitutional duty.
Obama,
however, has clearly abdicated his duty to take care that the laws
be faithfully executed, and he’s harmed the separation of powers that
the Founders of the Constitution so carefully delineated.
From the myriad delays of the Affordable Care Act to refusing to enforce federal drugs laws to
now effectively amending our immigration laws, Obama has positioned
himself as a super-legislator with the power to override the law.
Let’s hope the Supreme Court will help restore the balance of power by setting the administration straight in this case.
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