Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

High court declines to rule on DACA

White House tried to bypass lower court

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WASHINGTON » The Supreme Court on Monday rejected the Trump administra­tion’s highly unusual bid to bypass a federal appeals court and get the justices to intervene in the fate of a program that protects hundreds of thousands of young immigrants from deportatio­n.

The announceme­nt means the case affecting socalled “dreamers” will have to work its way through the lower courts before any Supreme Court ruling is possible. The case also could become moot if Congress takes action in the meantime. Right now, however, efforts to address the issue in Congress have hit a stalemate.

The Supreme Court’s decision for now to stay out of the case on the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, wasn’t surprising. It’s highly unusual for the Supreme Court to hear a case before a lower appeals court has considered it.

But DACA supporters hailed the decision as a significan­t — if only temporary — win. Trump said the case now will be heard by an appeals court, and “we’ll see what happens from there.”

“You know, we tried to get it moved quickly because we’d like to help DACA. I think everybody in this room wants to help with DACA,” Trump said to visiting governors. “But the Supreme Court just ruled that it has to go through the normal channels.”

DACA has provided protection from deportatio­n and work permits for about 800,000 young people who came to the U.S. as children and stayed illegally.

In September, Trump argued that President Barack Obama exceeded his executive powers when he created the program. Trump announced he was ending the program effective March 5 and gave lawmakers until then to come up with a legislativ­e fix.

But in recent weeks, federal judges in San Francisco and New York have made Trump’s deadline temporaril­y moot for people who have sought and been granted renewals; the rulings do not extend to people who are applying for the first time. Judges issued injunction­s ordering the administra­tion to keep DACA in place while courts consider legal challenges to Trump’s terminatio­n. As a result, U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services resumed accepting and processing DACA renewals in January, just as it had before Trump’s September announceme­nt.

The Trump administra­tion has not tried to block the injunction­s that force it to continue operating the program. Though the March 5 date is now moot, Greisa Martinez, policy and advocacy director for United We Dream, said DACA supporters planned to demonstrat­e in Washington on that day in part to continue to pressure Congress to act.

The Senate two weeks ago blocked a bipartisan bill offering Dreamers potential citizenshi­p and providing $25 billion for President Donald Trump to build his proposed border wall with Mexico. A more conservati­ve House proposal that sharply reduces legal immigratio­n and imposes other restrictio­ns has languished short of the GOP votes it would need to pass, leaving its fate in question.

The Supreme Court’s announceme­nt Monday that it wouldn’t step in to the case now means the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit will likely be the first appeals court to weigh in on the topic, the step before the case would return to the Supreme Court.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who joined other states in lawsuits to keep DACA in place, cheered the Supreme Court announceme­nt Monday.

“It’s a victory for all Dreamers, certainly a great victory for California,” Becerra said during a phone call with reporters. “It’s a victory for the rule of law and it’s a victory for our economy.”

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 ?? AP FILE ?? President Donald Trump addresses the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Md., last Friday.
AP FILE President Donald Trump addresses the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Md., last Friday.

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