USA TODAY International Edition

Immigratio­n on docket for Kavanaugh, Supreme Court

New conservati­ve majority could have huge impact

- Alan Gomez

When Justice Brett Kavanaugh settles in for his first week on the Supreme Court, he will inherit cases that will determine the short-term fate of more than 1 million immigrants and possibly change the course of the nation’s immigratio­n system for decades. From his perch at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Kavanaugh has presided over only a handful of cases that directly deal with immigratio­n. The cases were varied and dealt with very specific issues, but one lawyer who appeared before Kavanaugh said President Donald Trump’s nominee establishe­d a clearcut approach to immigratio­n. “The only common thread is the immigrant ... did not benefit from the outcome,” said Leon Fresco, who headed immigratio­n legislatio­n in President Barack Obama’s Justice Department. Marielena Hincapie is so concerned about Kavanaugh’s views on immigrants that the organizati­on she

leads – the National Immigratio­n Law Center, a traditiona­lly nonpartisa­n group that represents immigrants – issued its first-ever opinion on a Supreme Court nomination when it came out against Kavanaugh. “Kavanaugh on the court will be devastatin­g for the country for decades to come, especially for women and minorities,” Hincapie said after his confirmati­on was secured. With Kavanaugh’s addition, the nine-judge court will have its first reliable conservati­ve majority in decades. Other attorneys who appeared before Kavanaugh said the concerns are overblown. John Miano is an attorney with the Immigratio­n Reform Law Institute, a group that represents local government­s that pass laws cracking down on undocument­ed immigrants and has sued the federal government over policies it deemed too immigrant-friendly. Miano said his group lost as many times before Kavanaugh as it won, citing cases in which Kavanaugh allowed immigratio­n-related matters to drag out rather than bringing the gavel down against immigrants. “People are talking like this is going to be the end of the world, and it’s not,” Miano said. “He’s a very bright guy; he’s very thoughtful; he has a very even temper on the bench.” Those question marks will be answered as the court takes up landmark immigratio­n cases in the months and years to come. The most notable is a challenge to Trump’s decision to terminate the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. The Obama-era DACA has allowed more than 800,000 undocument­ed immigrants brought to the country as children to legally live and work in the USA. Three federal judges have ruled that the administra­tion used a flawed process and legal justificat­ion to end the program, decisions the Trump administra­tion is appealing. The court could decide whether a federal judge in California was justified when he blocked the administra­tion last week from terminatin­g most of the Temporary Protected Status program, known as TPS, which has allowed more than 300,000 foreigners to legally live and work in the USA as their home nations recover from civil strife and natural disasters. Kavanaugh’s first immigratio­n case will come before the court Wednesday, when the justices are scheduled to hear oral arguments in Nielsen v. Preap. That will decide which immigrants the federal government is legally allowed to detain without bond as they await their deportatio­n hearings. Attorneys and advocates on both sides of the immigratio­n debate will listen closely to get a sense of where Kavanaugh stands. Fresco predicts Kavanaugh will easily slide into a bloc of justices that will mostly rule against immigrants, a group that also includes Justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch. Miano disagreed, saying, “I would enthusiast­ically support him as a fair judge who has a good demeanor. But if I wanted to get a judge who’s going to rule for me on everything on immigratio­n, that ain’t Kavanaugh.”

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Brett Kavanaugh

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