Nine Republican states have filed a lawsuit asking a federal judge to end the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) immigration program, aiming to phase it out over two years, and insisted that President Joe Biden overstepped his authority when he renewed it in 2022.
DACA allows illegal immigrants who arrived in the United States as children to receive a two-year renewable deferred action from deportation, making them eligible for a work permit. President Biden renewed the DACA program last year, transforming it into a federal regulation. The renewal was announced in August 2022. It came into effect on Oct. 31, with the regulation replacing former president Barack Obama’s 2012 memo that initially established DACA.
In 2021, U.S. District Court Judge Andrew Hanen declared the 2012 memo as unlawful, a decision upheld by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in 2022. The court decision prevented first-time DACA applications from getting approved by the Biden administration. However, it allows existing DACA beneficiaries to continue renewing their enrollment.
On Tuesday, nine Republican-led states asked Judge Hanen to strike down DACA by finding last year’s regulations unlawful. They also want the court to phase out the program over two years.
Overstepping Authority
In the lawsuit, the plaintiffs argue that President Biden overstepped his constitutional authority by renewing DACA without getting approval from Congress.“This lawsuit is about the scope of executive power, not the wisdom of any particular immigration policy. No president can unilaterally override Congress’s duly enacted laws simply because he prefers different policy choices,” it said.
Biden’s decision on DACA suffers from the “same substantive flaws” as Obama’s earlier decision that was “already found unlawful by this Court and the Fifth Circuit.”
The lawsuit stated that roughly 14,000 aliens have used the DACA program to “adjust their immigration status,” thereby giving them a path to American citizenship which is “contrary to law.” Biden’s renewal last year, called the Final Rule, continues this policy, it argued.
DACA Beneficiaries, Criminal Elements
Some 800,000 people are estimated to be DACA beneficiaries. Roughly two-thirds of immigrants enrolled in the DACA program are estimated to be between the ages of 21 and 30.The top countries of origin for DACA beneficiaries include Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Peru, and South Korea. Mexico alone accounts for 81 percent of the beneficiaries.