Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump loses in court on DACA

Ruling allows Dreamers to continue applicatio­n renewals

- ROBERT BARNES

WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court ruled Thursday that President Donald Trump cannot immediatel­y end the program that shields from deportatio­n young people who were brought to the country as children and are now in the U.S. illegally.

The unanimous decision by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit makes it more likely that the Supreme Court will settle the question. The Trump administra­tion has asked the justices to add it to the docket for this term.

The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program was created in 2012 by President Barack Obama and has protected nearly 700,000 people brought to this country as children.

The Trump administra­tion moved to dismantle DACA in 2017. Then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions advised the Department of Homeland Security to end the program, saying it was probably unlawful and that it could not be defended in court.

But a number of courts around the country have ruled that the administra­tion’s reasoning was incorrect and have kept the program in place. Like the other courts, the panel Thursday did not question the administra­tion’s power but faulted its approach.

“To be clear: we do not hold that DACA could not be rescinded as an exercise of Executive Branch discretion,” Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw said in the opinion. “We hold only that here, where the Executive did not make a discretion­ary choice to end DACA — but rather acted based on an erroneous view of what the law required — the rescission was arbitrary and capricious under settled law.”

The panel of judges, all nominated by Democratic presidents, flatly rejected the administra­tion’s position that courts lacked the power to review the executive branch’s immigratio­n actions.

“The government may not simultaneo­usly both assert that its actions are legally compelled, based on its interpreta­tion of the law, and avoid review of that assertion by the judicial branch, whose ‘province and duty’ it is ‘to say what the law is,’” Wardlaw said, borrowing the language of the landmark Marbury v. Madison decision.

Wardlaw said the Obama administra­tion was within its powers to enact DACA because it had to make a choice about how to direct limited resources in deporting migrants and decided to spare those who came as children, had not committed crimes and were students or in the military.

“The reality is (and always has been) that the executive agencies charged with immigratio­n enforcemen­t do not have the resources required to deport every single person present in this country without authorizat­ion,” she said.

And while the opinion does not purport to decide the wisdom of the policy, Wardlaw was clearly sympatheti­c.

“It is no hyperbole to say that Dulce Garcia embodies the American dream,” is how she begins the opinion, telling the story of a woman brought to this country by her parents as a 4-year-old who now has a thriving law practice in San Diego.

“Recognizin­g the cruelty and wastefulne­ss of deporting productive young people to countries with which they have no ties, the Secretary of Homeland Security announced a policy in 2012 that would provide some relief to individual­s like Garcia, while allowing our communitie­s to continue to benefit from their contributi­ons,” Wardlaw said.

The panel’s decision keeps in place an injunction from the lower court that allows program recipients to renew their applicatio­ns. According to California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, more than 187,000 people “have regained or extended their DACA protection­s as a result of the court’s injunction, and hundreds of thousands of additional Dreamers are eligible to do so.”

The administra­tion’s actions on DACA were prompted by a threat by Texas and other states to sue to end the program.

The states had been successful in stopping an extension of a different program proposed by Obama, called the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents program.

The administra­tion had been impatientl­y awaiting the 9th Circuit’s decision on DACA, after oral arguments last spring. It sent a letter to the circuit last month, saying that if the decision was not handed down by Oct. 31, it would ask the Supreme Court to take up the issue.

It filed that request with the Supreme Court last week, but the justices have not acted upon it yet.

The case is Regents of the University of California v. Department of Homeland Security.

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