USA TODAY International Edition

Supreme Court defends DACA

Program still protects immigrant ‘ Dreamers’

- Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – A deeply divided Supreme Court blocked the Trump administra­tion Thursday from ending a popular program that allows nearly 650,000 young, undocument­ed immigrants to live and work in the USA without fear of deportatio­n.

Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote the majority opinion, called the Department of Homeland Security’s action “arbitrary and capricious,” therefore unlawful. The ruling was 5- 4: The court’s four liberal justices agreed, and the four more conservati­ve justices dissented.

“We do not decide whether DACA ( Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) or its rescission are sound policies,” Roberts said. “We address only whether the agency complied with the procedural requiremen­t that it provide a reasoned explanatio­n for its action. Here the agency failed to consider the conspicuou­s issues of whether to retain forbearanc­e and what if anything to do about the hardship to DACA recipients.”

It was a similar outcome to last year’s effort by the Trump administra­tion to add a question on citizenshi­p to the 2020 census. In that case as well, Roberts joined the four liberal justices in ruling that the administra­tion had not justified its action.

It was the second major ruling this week in which the conservati­ve court dealt a setback to the Trump administra­tion. Monday, it ruled 6- 3 in an opinion by Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch that the LGBTQ community is protected under a federal law banning sex discrimina­tion in the workplace.

Roberts rejected the argument that the winding down of the program was a violation of the Constituti­on’s Equal Protection Clause because of animus against Hispanics. Had the court ruled that the equal protection principle had been violated, DACA would have been more fully protected from a new effort to

dismantle it.

The court’s conservati­ves agreed with the conclusion that there was no racial animus. Only Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor disagreed.

Associate Justice Clarence Thomas wrote the main dissent, in which he said the DACA program was unlawful from the moment President Barack Obama created it in 2012. Gorsuch and Associate Justice Samuel Alito agreed.

“The decision to counterman­d an unlawful agency action is clearly reasonable,” Thomas said. “So long as the agency’s determinat­ion of illegality is sound, our review should be at an end.”

President Donald Trump tweeted a quote from Thomas’ dissent in which the court’s most conservati­ve justice called the ruling “an effort to avoid a politicall­y controvers­ial but legally correct decision.”

Former Vice President Joe Biden, Trump’s presumptiv­e Democratic opponent in November, called the ruling “a victory made possible by the courage and resilience of hundreds of thousands of DACA recipients who bravely stood up and refused to be ignored.” He pledged to seek congressio­nal legislatio­n next year to give them permanent protection if he defeats Trump at the polls.

Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote separately in dissent and decried Roberts’ ruling for continuing the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the program’s legal status.

“That uncertaint­y is a result of Congress’s inability thus far to agree on legislatio­n, which in turn has forced successive administra­tions to improvise, thereby triggering many rounds of relentless litigation with the prospect of more litigation to come,” Kavanaugh said.

Battling the coronaviru­s

Thousands of DACA recipients serve during the coronaviru­s pandemic as doctors, nurses, paramedics and other health care workers. That prompted immigratio­n rights groups to file court papers urging the justices to leave the program alone.

Before Thursday, nearly every federal judge to hear the dispute sided with the immigrants, the so- called Dreamers, leaving the program intact nationwide. .

The question before the justices in November was not whether the Trump administra­tion can wind down the program, which is undisputed. Rather, they were asked to decide whether the administra­tion’s initial reason for doing so – that DACA was illegal from the start – was accurate and sufficient and whether officials followed the Administra­tive Procedure Act in seeking to rescind the program.

Roberts was presumed to be the deciding vote, as he was last year when he voted with the court’s four liberal justices to strike down the Trump administra­tion’s effort to add the citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census.

His reasoning here was nearly identical. The administra­tion sought to bolster its reasons for ending DACA by amending its September 2017 determinat­ion nine months later. That was good enough for four conservati­ve justices, but Roberts said the new Homeland Security secretary should have issued a completely new decision.

“The basic rule here is clear: An agency must defend its actions based on the reasons it gave when it acted,” he wrote, referring to the faulty rescission in 2017. “This is not the case for cutting corners to allow DHS to rely upon reasons absent from its original decision.”

Obama created the program eight years ago after negotiatio­ns with Congress to create a path to citizenshi­p for the young immigrants faltered. Several years later, he sought to extend similar protection­s to more than 4 million undocument­ed parents of citizens or lawful permanent residents, but that was shot down by federal courts.

Texas threatened to sue over DACA if the Trump administra­tion didn’t end it. When the Department of Homeland Security did so, lawsuits were filed from California to New York and several places in between, and two federal judges blocked the action nationwide.

The U. S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, based in California and a perpetual thorn in Trump’s side, ridiculed the effort to deport “blameless and economical­ly productive young people with clean criminal records.”

To qualify every two years for DACA, recipients generally must be students, high school graduates or be enrolled or honorably discharged from the military. They cannot have been convicted of a felony, significant misdemeano­r or more than three lesser crimes.

Obama celebrated the court’s ruling. “Eight years ago this week, we protected young people who were raised as part of our American family from deportatio­n,” the former president tweeted. “Today, I’m happy for them, their families, and all of us.”

‘ Disappoint­ing week’

The threat of losing protected status prompted hundreds of DACA recipients to march, ride or fly to Washington for November’s oral argument and stage demonstrat­ions outside the court.

Nearly three dozen legal briefs were submitted on their side by groups representi­ng big business, educators, religious institutio­ns, labor unions, law enforcemen­t and national security groups, along with immigratio­n and civil rights organizati­ons.

As news of the high court’s ruling spread Thursday, Democratic officials, immigratio­n rights organizati­ons and other liberal groups celebrated.

“Ending DACA would have been cruel to the hundreds of thousands of Dreamers who call America home, and it would have been bad for our nation’s health,” said California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who brought one of several court challenges. “Today we prevailed on behalf of every Dreamer who has worked hard to help build our country – our neighbors, teachers, doctors and first responders.”

Theodore Olson, the conservati­ve former U. S. solicitor general who represente­d DACA recipients during oral argument, said, “The decision to end this policy without a lawful, genuine and transparen­t explanatio­n was inconsiste­nt with the rule of law, as the court recognized.”

Other conservati­ves blasted the court and Roberts in particular, who has become the court’s swing vote, frequently opposing the Trump administra­tion. Sen. Josh Hawley, R- Mo., who served as a law clerk to Roberts, called it “the most disappoint­ing week at # SCOTUS in years” on Twitter.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Greisa Martinez, right, reads the DACA ruling outside the Supreme Court Thursday.
DREW ANGERER/ GETTY IMAGES Greisa Martinez, right, reads the DACA ruling outside the Supreme Court Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States