Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ruling favors Texas’ views, bans pause on deportatio­ns

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

HOUSTON — A federal judge late Tuesday indefinite­ly banned President Joe Biden’s administra­tion from enforcing a 100-day moratorium on most deportatio­ns.

U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton issued a preliminar­y injunction sought by Texas, which argued that the moratorium violated federal law and risked imposing additional costs on the state.

Biden proposed the 100day pause on deportatio­ns during his campaign as part of a larger review of immigratio­n enforcemen­t and an attempt to reverse the priorities of former President Donald Trump. Biden has proposed an immigratio­n bill that would allow legal authorizat­ion for an estimated 11 million people living in the

U.S. illegally. He has also instituted other guidelines on who immigratio­n and border agents should target for enforcemen­t.

Tipton, a Trump appointee, initially ruled Jan. 26 that the moratorium violated federal law on administra­tive procedure and that the U.S. failed to show why a deportatio­n pause was justified. A temporary restrainin­g order that the judge issued was to expire Tuesday.

“In many ways, this case is about the proper limits of government­al power,” Tipton said in the 105-page order.

The Biden administra­tion said in a statement Wednesday that Tipton’s ruling did not affect many of the steps it was taking.

“After four years of an administra­tion that separated children from their parents, deported veterans and denied those fleeing persecutio­n the right to ask for protection, this administra­tion will bring order and humanity to our immigratio­n enforcemen­t system,” the White House said.

Tipton said Texas probably will prevail in its argument that the Department of Homeland Security violated the Administra­tive Procedure Act by not providing a reasoned justificat­ion for the plan.

“The core failure of [the department]” lies “in its omission of a rational explanatio­n grounded in the facts reviewed and the factors considered,” Tipton said. “This failure is fatal, as this defect essentiall­y makes [the department’s] determinat­ion to institute a 100-day pause on deportatio­ns an arbitrary and capricious choice.”

The judge said the new administra­tion did not consider fully the resulting financial strain on Texas, from costs associated with detaining more migrants and providing services such as education to unaccompan­ied children.

Tipton agreed with the Homeland Security Department that presidents wield extensive authority over immigratio­n policy. But the judge said the executive cannot “suspend” or “dispense with” the legislativ­e powers of Congress. That was a reference to a U.S. law that says the government “shall remove” so-called criminal migrants within 90 days of a final removal order against them, the judge said. The Biden administra­tion interprete­d those words to mean it “may remove” people within that time frame, “when it unambiguou­sly means must remove,” the judge said.

The judge also agreed with Texas that pausing deportatio­ns will increase costs for detention facilities in Texas because a “significan­t number of criminal aliens” who would otherwise be removed will be “moving freely within and into Texas” and probably end up detained again. Tipton noted similar costs for education, saying Texas spent between $26.7 million and $112.1 million to educate unaccompan­ied children in recent years, and that those costs would go up under Biden’s plan.

“Texas incurs real financial costs in providing public education to unaccompan­ied children,” Tipton said. “The record demonstrat­es that an increase in the number of unaccompan­ied children in Texas due to the 100-day pause would lead to an increase in its public education costs.”

It was not immediatel­y clear if the Biden administra­tion will appeal Tipton’s latest ruling. The Justice Department did not seek a stay of Tipton’s earlier temporary restrainin­g order.

GREEN CARD FREEZE

On Wednesday, Biden lifted a freeze on green cards issued by his predecesso­r during the pandemic that lawyers said was blocking most legal immigratio­n to the United States.

Trump last spring halted the issuance of green cards until the end of 2020 in the name of protecting the coronaviru­s-wracked job market.

On Dec. 31, Trump extended those orders until the end of March.

Trump had deemed immigrants a “risk to the U.S. labor market” and blocked their entry to the United States in issuing Proclamati­on 10014 and Proclamati­on 10052.

Biden stated in his proclamati­on Wednesday that shutting the door on authorized immigrants “does not advance the interests of the United States.”

“To the contrary, it harms the United States, including by preventing certain family members of United States citizens and lawful permanent residents from joining their families here. It also harms industries in the United States that utilize talent from around the world,” Biden stated in his proclamati­on.

Most immigrant visas were blocked by the orders, according to immigratio­n lawyers.

As many as 120,000 family-based preference visas were lost largely because of the pandemic-related freeze in the 2020 budget year, according to the American Immigrant Lawyers Associatio­n.

It also barred entry to immigrants with employment-based visas unless they were considered beneficial to the national interest such as health care profession­als.

Meanwhile, in the first five days since the Biden administra­tion began to process the thousands of asylum-seekers waiting in Mexico, the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees registered 12,000 people.

That’s nearly half the 25,000 active cases the U.S. government has cited.

People who have waited in Mexico and elsewhere to get hearings on their U.S. asylum requests are dealing now with a mix of hope and frustratio­n, along with overloaded websites and telephone lines that never stop ringing.

The hurdles are far better than the wait often in wretched conditions of tens of thousands of asylum-seekers forced to choose between waiting in Mexico — or returning to Central America — under the Migrant Protection Protocols, or Remain in Mexico program. Instituted by the Trump administra­tion in January 2019, the program sought to discourage asylum-seekers by making them wait in Mexico rather than releasing them with orders to appear for future court dates in the U.S.

The Homeland Security Department announced Wednesday that it would begin processing asylum-seekers with registered cases who have been living in a tent encampment on the banks of the Rio Grande in Matamoros, Mexico. Life in the camp has always been precarious, but it was especially hard hit by frigid winter weather that struck Texas and northern Mexico last week. Processing residents of the camp is a priority for the Biden administra­tion, the statement said.

Last week, the U.S. government began processing a small number of asylum-seekers with active cases in San Diego. The processing is expected to expand to El Paso soon.

According to preliminar­y data from the U.N. agency, of the 12,000 people who have registered, some 4,000 are children or dependents and about 1,200 registered from outside Mexico.

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