11/12/2015 -
Judge Andrew Napolitano Townhall.com
Earlier this week, a federal appeals court in New Orleans upheld
an injunction issued by a federal district court in Texas against the federal
government, thereby preventing it from implementing President Barack Obama's
executive orders on immigration. Critics had argued and two federal courts have
now agreed that the orders effectively circumvented federal law and were
essentially unconstitutional.
Though the injunction on its face restrains officials in the
Department of Homeland Security, it is really a restraint on the president
himself. Here is the back story.
President Obama has long wished to overhaul the nation's
immigration laws to make it easier for people who are here illegally to remain
here and to make it easier for them eventually to acquire the attributes of
citizenship. He may have a bighearted moral motivation, or he may have a
partisan political motivation. I don't know which it is, but his motivation has
driven him to use extra-constitutional means to achieve his ends.
During his first term in office, he attempted to have federal laws
changed -- quite properly at first -- by offering proposals to Congress, which
it rejected. That rejection left in place a complex regulatory scheme that is
partially administered by DHS and partially by the Department of Justice. It
left about 11.3 million people unlawfully present in the United States.
The conscious decision of Congress not to change the law in the
face of such a large number of undocumented people here left those people,
adults and children, exposed to deportation. It also left them entitled to
financial benefits paid for by the states in which they reside.
Deportation is a lengthy and expensive process. The courts have
ruled that all people subject to deportation are entitled to a hearing, with
counsel paid for by the government. If they lose, they are entitled to an
appeal, with counsel paid for by the government. The government has teams of
prosecutors, defense counsel and judges who address only deportations. The
highest number of people the government has successfully deported in a year is
about 250,000, which was done in 2013. If you add removals without trial (many
are voluntary) and rejections at the border, the number swells to 438,000 a
year.
While awaiting deportation, those people here unlawfully and not
confined are entitled to the social safety net that states offer everyone else,
as well as the direct benefits states make available to citizens, such as
public schooling, access to hospital emergency rooms, and housing and personal
living assistance.
Frustrated that Congress thwarted his will, President Obama --
resorting to his now infamous and probably regretted one-liner that he can
govern by using a pen and a phone -- issued a series of executive orders in
2012 to various federal agencies, directing them to cease deportation of
undocumented people if they complied with certain standards that the president
wished of them. The standards, compliance with which would bar deportation,
were essentially the same as those that the president had sought and Congress
had rejected.
Can the president write his own laws or procedures?
In the litigation that came to a head early this week, 26 states,
led by Texas, sued the federal government. In that lawsuit, the states argued
that they would be made to endure unbearable financial burdens if the
undocumented folks stayed where they are and if the states continued to make
the same social safety net available to them as they make available to their
lawful residents. Thus, the states argued, the president forced the states to
spend money they hadn't budgeted or collected to support a legal scheme that
Congress had not only never authorized but expressly rejected.
Can the president write his own laws and procedures?
The states also argued in their lawsuit that if the DHS and DOJ
complied with the president's executive orders, those federal departments would
be exceeding their authority under the statutes because the president was
exceeding his authority. This is a president who has argued dozens of times in
public that he is not a king and that he lacks the ability to recast the laws
as he wishes they had been written.
Can the president write his own laws and procedures?
In a word: No. The president can issue executive orders to
officials in the executive branch of government directing those officials to
enforce the laws as the president wishes them to be enforced -- within the
letter and spirit of those laws. But those executive orders cannot write new
laws or revise old laws or ignore existing laws that the Congress clearly
expects to be enforced. That is just what a federal district court judge ruled
earlier this year and just what a federal appellate court ruled in affirming
the district court earlier this week.
All people who embrace the rule of law -- whether they are for
open borders or for an impenetrable border wall -- should embrace these rulings
because they keep the president within the confines of the Constitution, which
he has sworn to uphold.
Under our constitutional system of supposedly limited government,
all legislative power is vested in Congress. The president enforces the laws;
he doesn't write them. His oath of office commits him to preserve, protect and
defend the Constitution, and it further commits him to enforce the federal laws
"faithfully" -- meaning whether he personally agrees with them or
not.
The clash between the president and the
courts is as old as our republic itself. Courts are traditionally loath to
interfere with the business of Congress or the president. Yet when the behavior
of another branch of government defies core constitutional norms, it is the
duty of the courts in a case properly before them to say what the Constitution
means and to order compliance with it.
No comments:
Post a Comment