Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Biden: Decision disappoint­ing

Federal judge halts citizenshi­p path for Dreamers

- By Amy B Wang and Maria Sacchetti

President Joe Biden on Saturday said it was “deeply disappoint­ing ” that a federal judge had decided to halt much of an Obama administra­tion initiative that protected undocument­ed “dreamers” who arrived in the United States as children, and said the Justice Department planned to appeal the ruling. The judge’s decision also prompted Biden and other Democrats to redoubled their pleas to Congress to pass legislatio­n — even if it required a budget reconcilia­tion process — that would provide a path to citizenshi­p to dreamers.

“Only Congress can ensure a permanent solution by granting a path to citizenshi­p for Dreamers that will provide the certainty and stability that these young people need and deserve,” Biden said in a statement. “It is my fervent hope that through reconcilia­tion or other means, Congress will finally provide security to all Dreamers, who have lived too long in fear.”

U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen on Friday sided with Texas and other states in his ruling that President Barack Obama oversteppe­d his executive authority when he created the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, calling it an “illegally implemente­d program.”

The ruling by Hanen, a George W. Bush appointee, allows the more than 600,000 young people already in the program to keep their protected status, but prohibits the Department of Homeland Security from approving new applicatio­ns. Hanen also issued a permanent injunction vacating the memo that created DACA in 2012 — when Biden was vice president — and remanded the issue to the Department of Homeland Security for reconsider­ation.

Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas said Saturday that he too was “disappoint­ed” by Hanen’s decision but that the department would continue processing DACA renewal requests, consistent with the ruling.

“DHS remains focused on safeguardi­ng DACA, and we will engage the public in a rulemaking process to preserve and fortify DACA,” Mayorkas said in a statement. Like Biden, Mayorkas also called on Congress to pass the American Dream and Promise Act through the reconcilia­tion process “to provide permanent protection that the American people want and Dreamers have earned.”

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who brought the lawsuit against the Biden administra­tion and has sought to block the administra­tion on other immigratio­n-related matters, cheered the decision Saturday.

“I think it’s right to stop a president who just decided that he didn’t like federal law & came up with his own immigratio­n laws,” Paxton tweeted. “We sued him, rightfully so, for violating federal law and we won.”

Hanen’s decision triggered an uproar from dreamers and activists, who decried Friday’s ruling as yet another instance of their long-term security being upended by political tempests. On Saturday morning, several DACA recipients and activists gathered in front of United Methodist Church in Washington to rally against the ruling and call on Congress to act.

“We are demanding, without any lack of clarity, citizenshi­p through the reconcilia­tion process,” Greisa Martinez Rosas, executive director of the nonprofit United We Dream, said to cheers.

She also fired off a warning shot to lawmakers, including Democrats, who released statements of sympathy and support that were not followed up by legislativ­e action.

“We cannot do anything with your well wishes and your tweets,” she declared. “We are demanding clear action in this moment.”

Immigrants brought to this country as children, known as “dreamers,” are among the most sympatheti­c of the 11 million immigrants in the United States illegally. Still, Republican and Democratic lawmakers have been unable to agree on whether to grant them legal status despite months of negotiatio­ns.

Democrats are considerin­g whether to use a budget reconcilia­tion measure to take that action, a move that would require only a simple majority vote in the evenly divided Senate.

In statements Friday, both Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D -N.Y., and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-calif.) vowed to press forward on legislatio­n that would ensure dreamers have a pathway to citizenshi­p. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Richard Durbin, D -Ill., who has sponsored legislatio­n for the past 20 years to grant dreamers citizenshi­p without success - said Congress had “found excuses to put off this decision” for too many years.

“Congress will now act quickly - with or without the party of Donald

Trump — to allow these Americans to finally become citizens,” Durbin said Friday.

 ?? Susan Walsh / Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden talks with reporters as he heads to Marine One on the White House lawn in Washington Friday to spend the weekend at Camp David.
Susan Walsh / Associated Press President Joe Biden talks with reporters as he heads to Marine One on the White House lawn in Washington Friday to spend the weekend at Camp David.

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