Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Speedy Texas suit targets bid to pause deportatio­ns

- PAUL J. WEBER AND NOMAAN MERCHANT

AUSTIN, Texas — Texas on Friday moved to stop President Joe Biden from allowing a 100-day moratorium on deportatio­ns, filing one of the first lawsuits against his new administra­tion.

In rushing to court not even a week after Biden was sworn in, America’s biggest red state signaled that it was ready to resume the role of chief antagonist to a Democratic president’s immigratio­n agenda, after four years of cheering on former President Donald Trump’s hardline policies along the southern border.

The federal lawsuit seeks a halt to the deportatio­n moratorium “for certain noncitizen­s” that was to begin Friday. Biden has already signed a raft of executive orders, including one revoking Trump’s mandate that made anyone illegally in the U.S. a priority for deportatio­n.

Texas claims the moratorium violates an agreement, signed in the waning weeks of Trump’s presidency, that required the federal government to run changes to immigratio­n enforcemen­t past the state first. BuzzFeed News first reported the Trump administra­tion signing similar agreements with Republican leaders in several states. Legal scholars have expressed doubt that the agreements will be enforceabl­e in court.

“Failure to properly enforce the law will directly and immediatel­y endanger our citizens and law enforcemen­t personnel,” Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said.

The Department of Homeland Security referred questions to the White House, which did not immediatel­y respond.

The lawsuit, which repeatedly cites Texas’ agreement with the Trump administra­tion, was filed before U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton, a Trump appointee, in the Southern District of Texas.

Since taking office Wednesday, Biden has made quick work of showing far-reaching intentions on immigratio­n that would unwind many of Trump’s crackdowns. His first steps included stopping constructi­on of the border wall with Mexico and lifting the travel ban on people from several predominan­tly Muslim countries.

Biden also says he will push to give legal status and a path to citizenshi­p to anyone in the United States before Jan. 1, an estimated 11 million people.

Texas shares more than 1,200 miles of border with Mexico, which the state’s Republican leaders say makes them particular­ly invested in the nation’s immigratio­n policies. It also received thousands of refugees annually before Trump virtually ended admissions.

The state is currently leading a fight to overturn the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that President Barack Obama instituted in 2012, which confers limited protection­s on people brought to the U.S. illegally as children.

Friday’s lawsuit echoes many of the same arguments Texas is making against DACA, that illegal immigratio­n drains educationa­l and health care resources. Supporters of immigrant protection­s say those arguments are flawed and that immigrants help the state’s economy and health care sector, particular­ly during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But battles over enforcemen­t during the Obama administra­tion also have provided ambitious Texas politician­s a readymade national platform, including former Gov. Rick Perry, who twice ran for president, and Gov. Greg Abbott, a potential 2024 contender who bragged as state attorney general that his job was to sue the federal government and go home.

In filing one of the first lawsuits against the Biden administra­tion, Paxton is eager to be seen as a champion for Republican­s not just as Democrats reclaim power in Washington, but as his own career is under dark clouds.

The FBI is investigat­ing Paxton, who was a loyal Trump ally, over accusation­s by top former aides that he abused his office at the service of a donor. Separately, Paxton has pleaded innocent in state court to felony charges of defrauding investors in a case that has dragged on for five years.

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