Friday, April 19

Appeals court sends DACA case back to lower court to review new Biden rule, temporarily protecting Dreamers


A federal appeals court on Wednesday granted a temporary reprieve to hundreds of thousands of young immigrants enrolled in a program allowing them to work and study in the US without fear of being deported, but it’s unclear how long it will last.

The ruling by the 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals directs the lower court judge who found that the decade-old Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program was unlawful to take into consideration a new rule issued by the Biden administration. Item allows the program to go forward, but only for current DACA recipients known as Dreamers, not new applicants.

The review rule potentially preserves DACA for at least several more months, but its future is far from assured, especially given the current, more conservative composition of the US Supreme Court.

The Biden administration has been preparing contingencies in case the courts shut the program down. People close to the White House have told NBC News that President Joe Biden was readying an executive order directing Immigration and Customs Enforcement to deprioritize the removal of DACA recipients and refrain their deportation if they aren’t deemed threats to public safety or national security. That action, however, is temporary and could be undone by another president.

In August, the administration also announced a new rule, set to go into effect on Oct. 31, to codify DACA and address some of the concerns the Supreme Court had voiced about the program in the past. The rule is what the appeals court directed a federal court judge in Texas to review.

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Former President Barack Obama established DACA by executive order in 2012 out of frustration over congressional inaction on immigration reform. The program established a way for young migrants brought into the US as children, who are often referred to as Dreamers based on never-passed legislation in Congress called the DREAM Act, a way to study and work without fear of being deported.

But former President Donald Trump, who had at times hailed these young people despite campaign promises to crack down on illegal immigration, announced in September 2017 that he was ending the program and called for a permanent version of the program as part of a “comprehensive” immigration overhaul. “Congress, get ready to do your job — DACA!” I have tweeted.

Congress failed to reach a deal, and advocates of the program filed suit to block its termination.

In June 2020, the US Supreme Court found in the advocates’ favor in a 5-4 ruling. The swing vote, Chief Justice John Roberts, sided with the liberal justices, finding that the Trump administration had broken the laws governing federal agencies when he ended DACA in 2017 because the memorandum that recommended its termination did not address crucial parts of the policy. Roberts pointed out toward the end of his opinion that DHS could simply revisit its legal strategy on how to unwind DACA in the future.

Meanwhile, Texas, which is home to over 100,000 people enlisted in the DACA program, pressed ahead with a lawsuit it filed in 2018 with the backing of other Republican-led states alleging that the program is illegal. Texas also alleged that the program is harmful because it enables DACA recipients to compete with citizens for jobs and leaves the state on the hook for some health care, education and social services costs.

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Immigration advocates countered that the states did not provide enough evidence about what those costs are, and that the states would have to pay those costs regardless. The states also failed to account for how “DACA recipients residing in the states outweigh the added revenue the states receive from their taxes and their contributions to the public (including through their work as healthcare professions, educators, and in other service jobs),” the advocates’ filing said.

In his July 2021 ruling, Texas federal court Judge Andrew Hanen sided with the states, finding that DHS did not have the authority to implement DACA and the program was unlawful. He stayed parts of his decision pending appeal, allowing DHS to process DACA renewal applications but barring the approval of new applicants.

Hanen noted in his ruling that the DACA recipients had engendered public sympathy.

“Many came to this country unlawfully or stayed in this country without permission through not fault of their own,” he wrote. “Further, according to many of the amicus briefs, the DACA population is generally well-educated and better situated to contribute to the well-being of this nation than other immigrant populations. As a group they are law-abiding and hold responsible positions, despite their youth. These factors make the DACA population a much more appealing and sympathetic group. While these may be compelling policy rationales for DACA, they can have no effect on this court’s legal conclusion.”

“As popular as this program might be, the proper origination point for the DACA program was, and is, Congress,” Hanen added.

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Zoe Richards contributed.


www.nbcnews.com

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