April 18, 2024

A Supreme Court Rebuke to the Trump Administration on DACA



By Michael Tan, J.D. / 02.28.2018
Staff Attorney
ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project


In a sharp rebuke to the Trump administration, the Supreme Court today refused to hear the governmentā€™s challenge to a lower courtā€™s decision ordering the government to keep in place the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (DACA). Since the administration announced last fall that it was ending the program on March 5, many DACA recipients have already lost their residence and work permits.

While the courtā€™s decision is good news, it doesn’tĀ endĀ the uncertainty, confusion, and fear of deportation forĀ theĀ hundreds of thousands of undocumented young people who came to the U.S. as children.

The Trump administration ordered anĀ end to DACAĀ in September, claiming that it was unconstitutional. The University of California, numerous states, local governments, nonprofit organizations, and several Dreamers, including a young man from Brooklyn named Martin Batalla Vidal, who works at a nursing home and rehabilitation center, challenged the administrationā€™s order.

On Jan. 9, a federal judge in the Northern District of California issued aĀ nationwide injunctionĀ against the shuttering of the DACA program and ordered the Trump administration to continue accepting renewal applications for DACA. Then, on Feb. 13, a judge in the Eastern District of New York issued aĀ similar rulingĀ in the Batalla Vidal case.

Both courts ruled that the administrationā€™s rationale for suspending the DACA program ā€” that it was unconstitutional and conflicted with the immigration laws ā€”Ā was incorrect and violated the AdministrativeĀ ProcedureĀ Act, which is a 1946 law that regulates federal agencies and provides judicial oversight over their behavior. The law prohibits ā€œarbitrary and capriciousā€ actions by federal agenciesĀ and provides a safeguard against unchecked power.

The Trump administration appealed the California decision to the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and also simultaneously sought review by the Supreme Court, asking it to take the case before an appeals court ruling. The administration had hoped it might be able to skip over the appellate court and have the case heard by the Supreme Court and decided by June. Today, the court refused, indicating that it saw no reason circumvent the judicial process.

The Supreme Courtā€™s refusal provides a reprieve for DACA recipients, but it by no means takes away the urgent need for Congress to come up with a legislative solution.Ā Even with DACA renewals continuing, nearly 800,000 DACA recipients live in fear that the lives they have built in the United States are in jeopardy.


Originally published by the American Civil Liberties Union with permission.