January 22, 2018 Margot
Cleveland - thefederalist.com
Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals (DACA) isn’t dead, and “dreamers” aren’t being deported,
even though that’s the entire basis Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer claims
for causing the government shutdown. It’s the Great Democrat Deception of 2018.
The proof is in a
petition the Department of Justice filed with the U.S. Supreme Court on
Thursday, seeking immediate review of a district court judge’s decision
striking President Trump’s decision to let DACA run out when it expires. That petition details the facts of
DACA no one is reporting.
Those facts lay bare
the fraud underlying Democrats’ politically motivated, selective shuttering of
the federal government. They insist the need to protect young illegal aliens
from deportation is so urgent that temporarily funding the federal government
must wait for Congress to legalize them.
Here are the facts. In
a June 15, 2012, memorandum entitled “Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals,”
the Department of Homeland Security announced its secretary would, “for
humanitarian reasons or simply for [her] own convenience, . . . notify an alien
of her decision to forbear from seeking his removal for a designated period.”
Under the 2012 policy,
following a successful background check DHS would provide “certain young people
who were brought to this country as children” a two-year commitment of “deferred
action.” But DACA expressly “confer[red] no substantive right, immigration
status or pathway to citizenship,” because “[o]nly the Congress, acting through
its legislative authority, can confer these rights.”
Prior to 2012, Congress
did not legislatively address the immigration status of illegal aliens brought
to the United States as children, even though President Obama had a solid
majority in the Senate and House following his 2008 victory. But now, ten years
later, Democrats say there is an emergency about these illegals’ status that
justifies shutting down the federal government.
Two years after that
2012 executive action, DHS unilaterally expanded DACA, “extending the
deferred-action period from two to three years and by loosening the age and
residency criteria.” DHS also created a new policy, DAPA—the Deferred Action
for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents. DAPA deferred lawful
action “for certain individuals who had a child who was a U.S. citizen or
lawful permanent resident.”
In response to DAPA and
the expanded DACA, 26 states sued the federal government arguing that DHS
violated the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) by issuing the regulations
without complying with the notice-and-comment procedures, and exceeded its
authority under the Immigration and Naturalization Act (INA). A federal agreed,
holding the Obama administration violated the APA and the INA.
The court issued a
nationwide injunction barring the enforcement of DAPA and the expanded DAFA. In
so holding, the district court stressed “Congress had repeatedly declined to
enact legislation ‘closely resembl[ing] DACA and DAPA.’” But now, three years
later, Democrats insist there is suddenly an emergency justifying shutting down
the federal government.
In 2015, the Fifth Circuit
upheld the decision striking DAPA and the expanded DACA policies. Yet Congress
still did not act. But now Democrats say this continued situation constitutes
an emergency justifying shutting down the federal government.
In 2016, in United
States v. Texas, the Supreme Court left “in place the nationwide injunction
against DAPA and the expansion of DACA.” Yet Congress still did not act. But
now Democrats say there is an emergency justifying shutting down the federal
government.
The original 2012 DACA
remained in place until 2017, when the states that had sued to challenge DAPA
and the expanded DACA policies “announced their intention to amend their
complaint to challenge the original DACA policy,” asserting “that [f ]or the
same reasons that DAPA and Expanded DACA’s unilateral Executive Branch
conferral of eligibility for lawful presence and work authorization was
unlawful, the original June 15, 2012 DACA memorandum is also unlawful.” The
U.S. attorney general determined that the original DACA policy was unlawful and
DHS concluded “it is clear that the June 15, 2012 DACA program should be
terminated.”
As a result, on
September 5, 2017, “DHS decided to wind down the original DACA policy in an
orderly fashion,” announcing in a rescission memo that “the June 15, 2012
memorandum was “rescind[ed].” However, recognizing the “complexities associated
with winding down the program,” DHS stated it would “provide a limited window
in which it w[ould] adjudicate certain requests for DACA.”
Specifically, DHS would
“adjudicate— on an individual, case-by-case basis—properly filed pending DACA
renewal requests from current beneficiaries that have been accepted by the
Department as of the date of this memorandum, and from current beneficiaries
whose benefits will expire between the date of this memorandum and March 5,
2018 that have been accepted by the Department as of October 5, 2017.’”
Following the September
2017 rescission memo, Congress did nothing. But all of a sudden, Democrats
insist there is an emergency justifying shutting down the federal government.
While Congress did
nothing, on January 9, 2018, a federal district court judge entered a
preliminary injunction ordering the government to “maintain the DACA program on
a nationwide basis.” On Thursday, the DOJ filed a petition with the Supreme
Court, asking the justices to bypass the normal appellate process—which would
consist of the government appealing to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
before seeking Supreme Court review.
Of significance: In
seeking immediate appeal before the Supreme Court, the DOJ did not ask
for a stay of the lower-court decision. In other words, the district court’s
injunction remains in effect and the federal government must “maintain the DACA
program on a nationwide basis.”
So, here’s where we are
now: No one has been deported under the rescission memo. DHS continues to
adjudicate DACA requests and will do so until March 5, 2018. That alone would
give Congress plenty of time to act. But beyond those facts, we have a
preliminary injunction requiring the federal government “to maintain the DACA
program on a nationwide basis,” and the DOJ has not sought to stay that
injunction. So until the litigation over the rescission memo concludes, DACA
remains in effect.
There is no emergency
justifying shutting down the federal government. Democrats are posturing in
preparation for the 2018 midterms. But unlike prior Republican administrations,
when cornered, the current commander in chief doesn’t cave—he turns
intransient. Given the reality of the current funding fight, that might just be
what Republicans need to finally win the battle of the shutdown. We’ll soon
know.
No comments:
Post a Comment