The Norwalk Hour

Supreme Court wrestles with Biden’s deportatio­n policy

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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday wrestled with a partisan-tinged dispute over a Biden administra­tion policy that would prioritize deportatio­n of people in the country illegally who pose the greatest public safety risk.

It was not clear after arguments that stretched past two hours and turned highly contentiou­s at times whether the justices would allow the policy to take effect, or side with Republican-led states that have so far succeeded in blocking it.

At the center of the case is a September 2021 directive from the Department of Homeland Security that paused deportatio­ns unless individual­s had committed acts of terrorism, espionage or “egregious threats to public safety.” The guidance, issued after Joe Biden became president, updated a Trump-era policy that removed people in the country illegally regardless of criminal history or community ties.

On Tuesday, the administra­tion’s top Supreme Court lawyer told the justices that federal law does “not create an unyielding mandate to apprehend and remove” every one of the more than 11 million immigrants living in the country illegally.

Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar said it would be “incredibly destabiliz­ing on the ground” for the high court to require that. Congress has not given DHS enough money to vastly increase the number of people it holds and deports, the Biden administra­tion has said.

But Texas Solicitor General Judd Stone told the court that the administra­tion violated federal law requiring the detention of people who are in the U.S. illegally and who have been convicted of serious crimes.

Chief Justice John Roberts was among the conservati­ve justices who pushed back strongly on the Biden administra­tion’s arguments. “It’s our job to say what the law is, not whether or not it can be possibly implemente­d or whether there are difficulti­es there, and I don’t think we should change that responsibi­lity just because Congress and the executive can’t agree on something ... I don’t think we should let them off the hook,” he said.

Yet Roberts, in questionin­g Stone, also called Prelogar’s argument compelling.

“It’s impossible for the executive to do what you want it to do, right?” Roberts asked.

Roberts wasn’t totally satisfied when Stone said the number of people potentiall­y affected total 60,000 to 80,000.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh said that whatever the actual number, “the resources still aren’t there.”

The court’s three liberal justices, on the other hand, were sympatheti­c to the Biden administra­tion’s arguments. Justice Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, made clear they believed that Texas and Louisiana, which joined Texas in suing over the directive, weren’t even entitled to bring their case.

The case is the latest example of a Republican litigation strategy that has succeeded in slowing Biden administra­tion initiative­s by going to GOP-friendly courts. Kagan picked up on that during arguments, saying that Texas could file its suit in a courthouse where it was guaranteed to get a sympatheti­c hearing and that one judge stopped “a federal immigratio­n policy in its tracks.”

In a separate ongoing legal dispute, three judges chosen by thenPresid­ent Donald Trump are among the four Republican-appointed judges who have so far prevented the administra­tion’s student loan cancellati­on program from taking effect.

The states said they would face added costs of having to detain people the federal government might allow to remain free inside the United States, despite their criminal records.

Federal appeals courts had reached conflictin­g decisions over DHS guidance.

The federal appeals court in Cincinnati earlier overturned a district judge’s order that put the policy on hold in a lawsuit filed by Arizona, Ohio and Montana.

But in the separate suit filed by Texas and Louisiana, a federal judge in Texas ordered a nationwide halt to the guidance and a federal appellate panel in New Orleans declined to step in.

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