The Denver Post

Bid to end “Dreamers” program to be ruled on

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON» Adding a highstakes immigratio­n case to its election-year agenda, the Supreme Court said Friday it will decide whether President Donald Trump can terminate an Obamaera program shielding young migrants from deportatio­n.

The justices’ order sets up legal arguments for late fall or early winter, with a decision likely by June 2020 as Trump campaigns for re-election. The president ordered an end to the program known as DACA in 2017, sparking protests and a congressio­nal effort to salvage it.

That effort failed, but federal courts in California, New York, Virginia and Washington, D.C.,

have blocked him from ending it immediatel­y. A federal judge in Texas has declared the program is illegal, but refused to order it halted.

The program — Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals — protects about 700,000 people, known as “Dreamers,” who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children or came with families that overstayed visas.

The DACA protection­s seem certain to remain in effect at least until the high court issues its decision.

The administra­tion had asked the court to take up and decide the appeals by the end of this month. The justices declined to do so and held on to the appeals for nearly five months with no action and no explanatio­n. The court did nothing Friday to clear up the reasons for the long delay, although immigratio­n experts have speculated that the court could have been waiting for other appellate rulings, legislatio­n in Congress that would have put the program on a surer footing or additional administra­tion action. Since entering the White House, Trump intermitte­ntly has expressed a willingnes­s to create a pathway to citizenshi­p for the hundreds of thousands of immigrants who have been protected by DACA. But he’s coupled it with demands to tighten legal immigratio­n and to build his long wall along the Mexican border — conditions that Democrats largely have rejected.

With the 2020 presidenti­al and congressio­nal election seasons underway or rapidly approachin­g, it seems unlikely that either party would be willing to compromise on immigratio­n, a touchstone for both parties’ base voters. Three decades of Washington gridlock over the issue underscore how fraught it has been for lawmakers.

On the campaign trail, nearly all of the two dozen Democratic presidenti­al candidates have pledged to work with Congress to provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for millions of people in the country illegally — beginning with the Dreamers. On the other hand, Trump sees his hard-line immigratio­n policies as a winning campaign issue that can energize his supporters.

“We are pleased the Supreme Court agreed that this issue needs resolution. We look forward to presenting our case before the court,” Justice Department spokesman Alexei Woltornist said.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a conference call with reporters that the high court’s ruling Thursday barring, for now, a citizenshi­p question on the 2020 census “demonstrat­es that the court’s not going to be fooled by the Trump administra­tion’s clearly disingenuo­us efforts when it comes to trying to undo and backslide on a lot of the laws and regulation­s that are there to protect our health and our welfare.”

The Obama administra­tion created the DACA program in 2012 to provide work permits and protection from deportatio­n to people who, in many cases, have no memory of any home other than the United States.

The Trump administra­tion has said it moved to end the program under the threat of a lawsuit from Texas and other states that raised the prospect of a chaotic end to DACA.

Then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions determined the program to be unlawful on the grounds that President Barack Obama did not have the authority to adopt it in the first place. Sessions cited a 2015 ruling by the federal appeals court in New Orleans that blocked a separate immigratio­n policy implemente­d by Obama and the expansion of the DACA program.

Texas and other Republican-led states eventually did sue and won a partial victory in a federal court in Texas. Civil rights groups, advocates for immigrants and Democratic-led states all have sued to prevent the end of the program.

In November, a threejudge panel of the federal appeals court in San Francisco ruled that the administra­tion decision to end DACA was arbitrary and capricious. The appeals court noted that the federal government has a long and well-establishe­d history of using its discretion not to enforce immigratio­n law against certain categories of people.

While the federal government might be able to end DACA for policy reasons under its own discretion, it can’t do so based on Sessions’ faulty belief that the program exceeds federal authority, the court held.

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