Current:Home > StocksImmigrants brought to U.S. as children are asking judges to uphold protections against deportation -NextFrontier Finance
Immigrants brought to U.S. as children are asking judges to uphold protections against deportation
View
Date:2025-04-14 10:04:45
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Immigrants who grew up in the United States after being brought here illegally as children will be among demonstrators outside a federal courthouse in New Orleans on Thursday as three appellate judges hear arguments over the Biden administration’s policy shielding them from deportation.
At stake in the long legal battle playing out at the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is the future of about 535,000 people who have long-established lives in the U.S., even though they don’t hold citizenship or legal residency status and they live with the possibility of eventual deportation.
“No matter what is said and done, I choose the U.S. and I have the responsibility to make it a better place for all of us,” Greisa Martinez Rosas, said Wednesday. She is a beneficiary of the policy and a leader of the advocacy group United We Dream. She plans to travel from Arizona to attend a rally near the court, where hundreds of the policy’s supporters are expected to gather.
The panel hearing arguments won’t rule immediately. Whatever they decide, the case will almost certainly wind up at the U.S. Supreme Court.
Former President Barack Obama first put the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in place in 2012, citing inaction by Congress on legislation aimed at giving those brought to the U.S. as youngsters a path to legal status and citizenship. Years of litigation followed. President Joe Biden renewed the program in hopes of winning court approval.
But in September 2023, U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen in Houston said the executive branch had overstepped its authority in creating the program. Hanen barred the government from approving any new applications, but left the program intact for existing recipients, known as “Dreamers,” during appeals.
Defenders of the policy argue that Congress has given the executive branch’s Department of Homeland Security authority to set immigration policy, and that the states challenging the program have no basis to sue.
“They cannot identify any harms flowing from DACA,” Nina Perales, vice president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, said in a news conference this week.
Texas is leading a group of Republican-dominated states challenging the policy. The Texas Attorney General’s Office did not respond to an emailed interview request. But in briefs, they and other challengers claim the states incur hundreds of millions of dollars in health care, education and other costs when immigrants are allowed to remain in the country illegally. The other states include Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, South Carolina, West Virginia, Kansas and Mississippi.
Among those states’ allies in court briefs is the Immigration Reform Law Institute. “Congress has repeatedly refused to legalize DACA recipients, and no administration can take that step in its place,” the group’s executive director, Dale L. Wilcox, said in a statement earlier this year.
The panel hearing the case consists of judges Jerry Smith, nominated to the 5th Circuit by former President Ronald Reagan; Edith Brown Clement, nominated by former President George W. Bush; and Stephen Higginson, nominated by Obama.
veryGood! (1961)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- California Declares State of Emergency as Leak Becomes Methane Equivalent of Deepwater Horizon
- Sea Level Rise Is Creeping into Coastal Cities. Saving Them Won’t Be Cheap.
- Climate and Weather Disasters Cost U.S. a Record $306 Billion in 2017
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- Here's How Sarah Ferguson Is Celebrating the Coronation At Home After Not Being Invited
- Starbucks is rolling out its olive oil drink in more major cities
- Encore: A new hard hat could help protect workers from on-the-job brain injuries
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Daily 'breath training' can work as well as medicine to reduce high blood pressure
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Today’s Climate: June 10, 2010
- High rents outpace federal disability payments, leaving many homeless
- What are your chances of catching monkeypox?
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- 2 shot at Maryland cemetery during funeral of 10-year-old murder victim
- There's a global call for kangaroo care. Here's what it looks like in the Ivory Coast
- Climate and Weather Disasters Cost U.S. a Record $306 Billion in 2017
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
All the Ways Queen Elizabeth II Was Honored During King Charles III's Coronation
Zoonotic diseases like COVID-19 and monkeypox will become more common, experts say
Astrud Gilberto, The Girl from Ipanema singer who helped popularize bossa nova, dead at 83
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Polar Vortex: How the Jet Stream and Climate Change Bring on Cold Snaps
Today’s Climate: June 8, 2010
2 teens who dated in the 1950s lost touch. They reignited their romance 63 years later.