Judges
appear skeptical of Obama immigration actions
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[July 11, 2015]
By Kathy Finn
NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - U.S. appeals court
judges on Friday appeared divided as they considered President Barack
Obama's effort to shield more than 4 million illegal immigrants from
deportation, a policy put on hold by a lower court as a presidential
overreach.
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A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard
arguments in the Obama administration's appeal of the lower court
ruling. Two of the three judges expressed skepticism about the
government's arguments in defense of Obama's executive actions on
immigration, announced last November.
The same court in May rebuffed the administration by declining to
overturn the federal district judge's February injunction that
temporarily blocked Obama's actions.
Officials in Texas and 25 other states sued in December to stop the
administration from launching the program, which would give a
reprieve from deportation to some parents of U.S. citizens and
permanent residents while expanding a 2012 initiative that applies
to illegal immigrants who came the United States as children.
Several dozen supporters of Obama's immigration policies waved signs
and chanted slogans outside the New Orleans courthouse before the
hearing began.
Judges Jerry Smith and Jennifer Walker Elrod, both of whom sat on
the panel that upheld the injunction in May, appeared troubled that
the program would give benefits to people in the country illegally.
Noting that a work authorization "is a prelude" to obtaining other
benefits, Elrod suggested to Obama administration lawyer Benjamin
Mizer that insisting the program is only about work permits is "sort
of disingenuous."
Smith also pressed the issue. "Here you have this granting (of legal
status) to an entire classification that puts them one step ahead
for lots of benefits," he said.
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Judge Carolyn Dineen King, who was not part of the earlier
proceeding, appeared more sympathetic to the administration. Several
times she posed pointed questions to Texas Solicitor General Scott
Keller about why Texas opposes the action so vehemently.
Mizer told the court that Texas had incorrectly focused on the
granting of driver's licenses and benefits such as Social Security
and the earned income tax credit to illegal aliens.
"It's remarkable that the entire policy is being enjoined on the
mere policy of driver's licenses," Mizer said.
For Texas, Keller argued that a federal policy should not be able to
override state laws that reserve certain benefits only to those who
are lawfully present.
(Reporting by Kathy Finn; Editing by Lawrence Hurley and Will
Dunham)
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