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DACA could dies If Obama Immigration Action Goes Down
Young immigrants given work permits, drivers licenses and a reprieve from deportation could lose it all.

The Supreme Court announced Tuesday it will hear a lawsuit from 26 states challenging President Barack Obama’s stalled 2014 executive action to allow as many as 5 million people living in the U.S. illegally to avoid deportation and receive work permits – but the court’s ruling may also spell doom for a 2012 policy already benefiting about 800,000 people brought to the U.S. illegally as children.

The older and currently operational program, called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), was announced by Obama after the DREAM Act failed in Congress and is not directly challenged in the states' lawsuit. But widened eligibility for DACA is contested alongside a challenge to the much larger Deferred Action for Parents of Americans (DAPA) proposal, which would grant a reprieve to parents of people who are American citizens or lawful permanent residents.

“I would be very nervous about DACA,” says Yale Law School professor Cristina Rodriguez, if the Supreme Court rules against the DACA extension and DAPA.

“In the other lawsuits against DACA, the petitioners weren't the states, so if the court finds the states have standing, then DACA is in trouble if the states want to call it into question,” she says.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services statistics show nearly 800,000 people have benefited from DACA through fiscal 2015. The program currently requires two-year renewals, nearly 500,000 of which have been granted.
Hiroshi Motomura, a professor at the UCLA School of Law, says a decision from the Supreme Court against the 2014 immigration orders “would open the door” for a legal assault on DACA – but he’s not sure the outcome would dictate doom for the older program.

“Of course the issue will be what constitutional differences there are between the two programs,” he says. “We can’t really know the answer to that question without knowing yet what the court will say in this case. If the court focuses on the scale of the program, for example, it may matter that DAPA has a broader potential reach than DACA.”

Motomura says the courts also may feel differently about DACA because of the age of the beneficiaries, pointing to the court’s 1982 decision in Plyler v. Doe, which addressed states’ rights to discriminate against schoolchildren living in the U.S. unlawfully.
If the Supreme Court rules against the Obama administration, a major unknown remains whether it would do so on grounds that the administration had to submit the proposal for a public notice and comment period as required for some regulations by the Administrative Procedure Act – as District Judge Andrew Hanen found – or reach deeper like appeals judges who found the 2014 reforms are "not authorized by statute.”

“The significant differences are more numerous, of course, if the court decides on statutory grounds of some sort,” Motomura says. “At that level, for example, it’s possible that APA notice and comment requirements apply to one program but not the other, or vice versa.”

Obama’s decision to grant the broad immigration reprieve in 2014 was met with howls of constitutional usurpation and kingly disregard for democracy from opponents, including from lawyers who worked hard to strengthen executive authority during the George W. Bush administration.

Photos from PROFESIONALES LATINOS EN INTELAMERICA.ORG's post 04/15/2014

En solo 6 dias se agotaron los 85,000 cupos de visa H-1B que permite a Profesionales y Tecnicos aplicar por residencia Temporal. Se quedaron por fuera mas de 100.000 solicitudes de personas capacitadas que querian brindar la contribucion de sus conocimientos y talentos para el crecimiento economico del Pais. Cuando se daran cuenta nuestros politicos que una Reforma Migratoria es necesaria para el desarrollo del Pais, cuando se daran cuenta que la migracion en Estados Unidos antes que una peste indeseable es una ventaja competitiva a nivel internacional, cuando se daran cuenta que los migrantes somos una realidad nacional que por su inaccion y su ignorancia antes que perseguidos deben ser incorporados como lo que son y representan: una pieza clave de la Economia de Estados Unidos.

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