States suing over President Obama’s sweeping executive actions on immigration are taking legal maneuvers to run out the clock and prevent any chance that the programs impacting millions of undocumented immigrants will be enacted before Obama leaves office.
Texas Solicitor General Scott Keller, who is leading a lawsuit filed on the behalf of 25 other states, on Monday asked the Supreme Court for additional time to respond to the Obama administration’s appeal to the justices, which seeks to lift a temporary hold that a lower court placed on the immigration measures.
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The program has been tied up in a lengthy legal battle for nearly a year, leaving as many as five million undocumented immigrants in legal limbo, unable to apply for a pair of programs that offer a three-year work status and shield from deportation the so-called DREAMers, those brought to the country when they were still children, and undocumented parents of U.S. citizens.









