Obama
administration asks top court to revive immigration plan
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[November 21, 2015]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama
administration on Friday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to revive
President Barack Obama's executive action to protect millions of illegal
immigrants from deportation, saying Republican-led states had no legal
basis to challenge it.
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Exactly a year to the day after Obama announced the plan, the
Justice Department formally appealed a 2-1 decision on Nov. 9 by the
New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that affirmed a
lower court's February decision to halt it.
If the appeals court ruling is left in place, millions of people
would "continue to work off the books, without the option of lawful
employment to provide for their families," Solicitor General Donald
Verrilli said in the filing to the nine justices.
Obama's executive order would let up to 4.7 million illegal
immigrants live in the United States without the threat of
deportation. It was directed at people with no criminal records
whose children are U.S. citizens.
Verrilli wrote that the Supreme Court should hear the case because
the appeals court "upheld an unprecedented nationwide injunction
against implementing a federal immigration enforcement policy of
great national importance."
If left intact, the ruling would "allow states to frustrate the
federal government's enforcement of the nation's immigration laws,"
Verrilli added.
The legal challenge was made by 26 Republican-governed states led by
Texas that contend Obama overstepped his presidential powers by
bypassing the Republican-led Congress and acting unilaterally.
The states have no legal standing to sue the U.S. government over
decisions on how to enforce federal laws, the administration said in
its appeal.
A spokesman for Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said the state
will "continue defending the rule of law" against "the president's
unconstitutional use of executive power."
The administration had said on Nov. 10 that it planned an appeal.
The justices will consider whether to hear the case once they
receive responses from the states, due within 30 days.
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If they hear the dispute, it would become one of the centerpiece
cases of the court's term that runs through June, along with a
challenge to a restrictive Texas abortion law.
Two hours after the appeal was lodged, dozens of immigration
advocates rallied in front of the Supreme Court building, chanting
in English and Spanish and waving placards. One read, "Children have
the right to be with their parents."
Separately, the appeals court on Thursday allowed three illegal
immigrant women from Texas to participate in the case in support of
the administration.
Obama's executive order, which came after a bipartisan immigration
policy overhaul bill passed by the Senate died in the House of
Representatives, expanded a program first launched in 2012 that
deferred deportation for immigrants brought to the United States as
children.
The immigration issue has driven a wedge between Hispanics, a voting
bloc with rising clout, and Republicans, many of whom take a hard
line against illegal immigrants. Most of the estimated 11 million
illegal immigrants are Hispanic.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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