President Obama’s sweeping executive actions on immigration have been delayed for more than a month thanks to legal challenges aimed at blocking deportation protection for millions of undocumented immigrants.
In that time, there’s been a great deal of uncertainty surrounding the timing of the ongoing injunction — will the executive actions be delayed indefinitely? Will the federal government’s appeals put enrollment for the program back on track?
Well, on Tuesday, those following the court drama got one step closer to being able to answer those questions.
What’s going on?
The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals granted the Obama administration’s request for an expedited appeal, which could ultimately cut down the number of months before the court reaches a final decision.
On April 17, the appellate court will hear oral arguments in the Justice Department’s challenge to a federal judge’s ruling last month that placed a temporary freeze on the immigration actions. Siding with the 26 states suing the federal government over the executive actions, District Judge Andrew Hanen in Texas had placed a preliminary injunction on the programs to bar immigration officials from accepting new applications.
The DOJ is now asking the 5th Circuit to lift Hanen’s temporary block, and allow enrollment to move forward as planned.
So why is this important?
In agreeing to fast-track the appeal, the 5th Circuit is signaling that it is taking the timing of the process as a whole very seriously.
“It all shows how the 5th Circuit seems to recognize that it is a very important case,” said Carl Tobias, law professor at the University of Richmond.
As many as four million undocumented immigrants who were expected to qualify for the executive actions will continue to languish in a legal limbo while the challenges wind through the courts. The executive actions were initially intended to roll out in two phases: The first part was supposed to kick off on Feb. 18, extending an already existing program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which has offered work permits and deportation relief to hundreds of thousands of young undocumented immigrants since 2012. The second portion of enrollment for Obama’s executive actions were scheduled for May, benefiting the undocumented parents of U.S.-born citizens and permanent residents.
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