DACA: Trump Admin to Renew Attempt to Rescind It: Report

Policy

[ad_1]

People hold signs to celebrate the Supreme Court’s ruling to disallow the rescinding of the DACA program, in San Diego, Calif., June 18, 2020. (Mike Blake/Reuters)

The Trump administration will re-up its attempt to end President Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program this week after the Supreme Court blocked its latest effort last month, multiple sources told The Hill.

One source who briefed The Hill on the latest developments said the White House had initially slated the renewed effort for last week, but pushed it back to this week. Speaking to Fox & Friends on Monday morning, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows signaled action was coming, saying “starting this week, you’ll see executive orders, you’ll see business that actually goes forward from the Oval Office when Congress doesn’t act.”

In June, the Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision that the Trump administration’s attempt to end DACA violated the Administrative Procedure Act’s “arbitrary and capricious” standard and could not move forward. In response, President Trump said “nothing was lost or won” in the decision, adding that the court had “punted.”

You Might Like

The program, which was instituted by President Obama in 2012, affects approximately 700,000 illegal aliens brought to the United States as children. Through DACA, participants can apply for renewable deportation deferrals and receive work eligibility, but are not given a path to citizenship.

Under President Trump, the Department of Homeland Security has filed multiple memoranda — first in 2017 under then-acting DHS secretary Elaine Duke, and a follow-up in 2018 by former DHS secretary Kirstjen Nielsen — seeking to end the program, arguing that it is unconstitutional and cannot be maintained.

Trump has previously said that “a deal will be made” with Democrats over the status of DACA’s participants if his administration was successful in ending the program. Former vice president Joe Biden has been outspoken in his defense of DACA, calling its participants “more American than most Americans” during a campaign event in January.

Send a tip to the news team at NR.

[ad_2]

Read the Original Article Here

Articles You May Like

Talent war between family offices and Wall Street drives up salaries
PBS’s Amanpour Celebrates ‘Heart of the Pro-Palestinian Campus Peace Movement’
Judge rejects J&J, Bristol Myers Squibb challenges to Medicare drug-price negotiations
Ukraine Retreats From Frontline Positions As Kyiv Waits For Key US Aid
Trump Is Gagged, but Only NOW Does the Judge Wag a Limp Finger at His Trial’s Biggest Trash Talkers

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *