December 26, 2024

Judge orders Trump administration to restore DACA

DACA #DACA

a sign on the side of a car: An immigrant family joins a vehicle caravan rally to support the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program in Los Angeles, June 18, 2020. © Damian Dovarganes/AP Photo An immigrant family joins a vehicle caravan rally to support the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program in Los Angeles, June 18, 2020.

A federal judge in New York has ordered the Trump administration to begin accepting new applications for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program — the Obama-era initiative that provides quasi-legal status to immigrants who entered the U.S. illegally as children.

U.S. District Court Judge Nicholas Garaufis issued an order Friday directing the Department of Homeland Security to announce by Monday that it is resuming the approval of new DACA applications and work permits. The judge also ordered DHS to return to its prior practice of granting and extending DACA status for two years at a time.

The Brooklyn-based Garaufis ruled last month that a Trump administration policy refusing to allow new applications was void because the official who issued it in July, Chad Wolf, lacked the authority to do so. The Trump administration describes Wolf as the acting secretary of Homeland Security, but the judge said Wolf was not lawfully elevated to that position.

While the judge’s new order appears likely to open the window for new DACA applications for the first time since 2017, the number of new applicants may be modest since the same criteria used at the program’s outset in 2012 will be in place. Applicants must have resided in the U.S. since 2007 and have come to the country when they were under 16.

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Garaufis’ order also instructs the administration to begin offering another benefit called advanced parole, which lets DACA recipients leave the country for a time without jeopardizing their status, and which was also effectively eliminated by the Trump administration.

“DHS is DIRECTED to post a public notice, within 3 calendar days of this Order, to be displayed prominently on its website and on the websites of all other relevant agencies, that it is accepting first-time requests for consideration of deferred action under DACA, renewal requests, and advance parole requests, based on the terms of the DACA program prior to September 5, 2017,” wrote Garaufis, an appointee of President Bill Clinton.

The Supreme Court ruled, 5-4, in June that the Trump administration’s 2017 decision to wind down DACA was legally flawed. The ruling did not foreclose the possibility of President Donald Trump’s appointees ending the program, but faulted officials for failing to take account of relevant factors when seeking to shut the program down three years ago.

The decision was expected to restore the program to its full scope, but a couple of weeks later Wolf issued his order allowing renewals for a year at a time, but refusing to allow new applications.

President-elect Joe Biden was expected to fully restore the DACA program, even in the absence of Garaufis’ order. However, DACA is still under legal pressure from a suit filed by Texas and other states who alleged that Obama lacked the legal authority to initiate the program in the first place.

“We are clear-eyed about the reality that Republican Attorneys General and the Trump Administration will again try to dismantle DACA through their ongoing litigation in Texas — and we need a legislative solution — but today’s order is an important victory for DACA recipients and the thousands of young dreamers who will now have access to this program,” said Todd Schulte, of immigration advocacy group FWD.us. “Today’s order could not be more clear and must be followed immediately, without delay.”

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