Lawsuit opens new front in Obama
immigration legal fight
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[August 26, 2016]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Immigration
advocates on Thursday mounted a long-shot effort to revive part of U.S.
President Barack Obama's plan to shield millions of immigrants from
deportation by filing a lawsuit challenging the national scope of a
court order that blocked it.
With favorable court rulings, the lawyers filing the lawsuit say it has
the long-term potential to unravel decisions that blocked Obama's
November 2014 plan nationwide. The White House program, if it had been
fully implemented, could have allowed up to four million people with no
legal immigration status to obtain work authorization.
The lawsuit was filed in federal court in New York on behalf of Martin
Batalla Vidal, 25, an immigrant from Mexico who has lived in the United
States since he was seven and has benefited from the program.
He initially received a three-year work authorization, which has now
been revoked due to a Texas judge's ruling in February 2015 that blocked
Obama's plan. Texas and 25 other states had challenged it.
Vidal would still be eligible for a two-year work authorization under an
earlier program, which has not been challenged and was not covered by
the injunction.
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Vidal's lawyers at the National Immigration Law Center say that if he
wins, the ruling could have broad implications because it could help to
eventually reinstate Obama's program for up to 60 percent of potential
applicants in parts of the country not covered by the Texas ruling.
The Texas judge's ruling was upheld on appeal. On June 23, the Supreme
Court deadlocked 4-4 on the case, leaving the appeals court decision in
place.
The court is currently one justice short following the death of Justice
Antonin Scalia in February. The Supreme Court is currently considering
whether to rehear the case once it has a full complement of justices.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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