Opponents said there will likely be a three-pronged legal approach
to stymie Obama's moves: Congress could sue the president for
constitutional overreach, states could file lawsuits arguing the
action strains local finances, or individuals could try to prove
they've been harmed by the order. Just hours after the speech, an
Arizona sheriff filed suit arguing the reform is unconstitutional.
"There is going to be massive litigation all over the place because
there is tremendous legal confusion about what the administration is
doing and what the states' obligations will be," said Dan Stein from
the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), which calls
for restrictions on immigration.
While law scholars say the president is on strong legal footing, a
flurry of lawsuits will cause headaches for the Obama administration
in its final two years and may stir public opinion against a policy
meant to be one of his signature triumphs.
Obama's health care plan, another major political victory for the
President, has also been mired in legal challenges with opponents
taking suits all the way to the Supreme Court. Just on Friday,
Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives filed a
long-anticipated lawsuit challenging Obamacare.
States are already lining up to sue over Obama's immigration action,
under which he plans to grant temporary legal status to some 4.4
million undocumented immigrants who are parents of U.S. citizens and
legal permanent residents.
Republican governors Scott Walker of Wisconsin, Rick Perry of Texas
and Pat McCrory of North Carolina have all voiced support for taking
legal action without giving further details. Oklahoma Attorney
General Scott Pruitt also announced his intention to sue.
MODEL LAWSUIT
Still, making a legal case will be an uphill battle. Presidents
historically have had wide discretion to act
alone on immigration and under a concept known as "prosecutorial
discretion," can decide to not enforce every violation of federal
law when resources are limited.
In a 33-page legal memo, the Department of Justice said the action
falls within the bounds of the constitution and that Congress has
supported favorable treatment of law-abiding immigrants with deep
U.S. ties.
The main hurdle for any lawsuit will be proving "standing," a
requirement under U.S. law that for someone to be able to sue, they
have to show they have been directly harmed.
The hardest case to win would be one filed by Congress, legal
experts say, since lawmakers would struggle to prove standing.
Republicans have vowed to act in other ways and could try to pass
laws to take away the President's authority to act on immigration or
slash funds for his initiatives.
States might have a stronger argument if they can prove financial
harm from the program.
One ongoing case challenging Obama's previous executive action in
2012 to grant deportation relief to immigrants brought to the United
States illegally as children, could serve as a model.
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The suit was filed by a group of Immigration and Customs Enforcement
officers upset by White House directives. The state of Mississippi
attempted to join the action. To prove standing, Mississippi
argued illegal immigrants
drained state resources and the ICE agents said they were being
forced to violate their oaths to enforce the law.
Even though a federal judge dismissed the case, he found the ICE
agents had standing. Mississippi was dropped from the case but only
because its economic analysis showing harm was outdated. The agents
are appealing.
Conservative groups also said U.S. workers might be able to
bring a case if they can prove they were displaced by immigrants
granted new work permits.
"We will be looking for people who can demonstratively prove that
aliens who are getting work documents are working in similar
fields," Stein from FAIR said.
The suit filed Thursday by Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio -
whose police force has been sued for racial profiling of immigrants
- is short on legal reasoning and is likely to be dismissed, said
Kari Hong a Boston College Law School professor.
"At this point it's all rhetoric. It's not based in strong legal
analysis," Hong said.
Short of legal action, states could move to withhold
benefits to recipients of the new status. But immigration advocates
are likely to counter those moves with their own suits, potentially
clogging the courts with more cases related to Obama's order.
After the deportation relief was announced in 2012, Arizona,
Nebraska and Michigan all blocked young recipients from obtaining
drivers licenses. Immigrants sued in all three states.
(Additional reporting by Lawrence Hurley in Washington and Gabriel
Denedetti in Boca Raton; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Martin
Howell)
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