U.S.
justices' 2007 climate change ruling looms over immigration case
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[November 12, 2015]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The conservative
legal challenge to President Barack Obama's executive action on
immigration, in line for U.S. Supreme Court review, would force the
justices to wrestle with their own conflicting votes on when states have
a legal right to sue the federal government.
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It is a question the court would have to answer before it could
rule on whether Obama exceeded his presidential powers, as 26
Republican-governed states led by Texas contend, by bypassing a
gridlocked Congress and taking unilateral executive action aimed at
shielding millions of illegal immigrants from deportation.
The case represents another conservative challenge to one of Obama's
top policy priorities to come before the Supreme Court.
The justices could decide as early as January on whether to hear the
dispute during their current term, which runs through June. If they
do, they would have to decide how much weight to give the court's
2007 decision in a major environmental case.
The court was split on ideological lines in ruling 5-4 that
Democratic-leaning states led by Massachusetts could sue Republican
former President George W. Bush's administration in a bid to spur
U.S. action on climate change. The ruling eventually led to the
Obama administration issuing the first-ever U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions regulations. In that case, the liberal justices voted in favor of the states and
conservatives dissented. This time, it will be conservatives asking
the court to rule that states can sue and liberals arguing the
opposite.
The Obama administration said on Tuesday it would seek Supreme Court
review after an appeals court ruled in favor of the states
challenging the November 2014 order, affirming a lower court's order
blocking Obama's action. In Monday’s decision backing the states,
the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals spent seven pages analyzing
the environmental case and cited it throughout the ruling.
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Seven of the current nine justices participated in the 2007 case,
including frequent swing vote Anthony Kennedy, who backed the
states.
Elizabeth Wydra, a lawyer with the liberal Constitutional
Accountability Center, said conservative and liberal justices alike
will be concerned about "courts becoming the battlefield for
political disputes" by allowing states to challenge a broad range of
federal actions.
Josh Blackman, a South Texas College of Law professor who wrote a
brief to the appeals court backing the challenge to Obama, said
conservative justices may find the potential harm suffered by states
if the president's actions take effect is "more concrete" than the
claim made by states in 2007 that were concerned by climate change's
future impact.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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