Judge rejects lawsuit against Obama on immigration

December 24, 2014 11:32 am | Updated April 09, 2016 11:05 am IST - WASHINGTON

A demonstration in front of the White House in Washington on Nov 20, 2014 as President Barack Obama announced executive actions on immigration during a nationally televised address.

A demonstration in front of the White House in Washington on Nov 20, 2014 as President Barack Obama announced executive actions on immigration during a nationally televised address.

A federal judge on Tuesday night rejected an Arizona sheriff’s lawsuit seeking to halt President Barack Obama’s plan to spare nearly 5 million people from deportation.

Refusing to rule on the merits of the case, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell said the role of courts is not to engage in policymaking that is better left to the political branches of government.

The case brought by Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio “raises important questions regarding the impact of illegal immigration on this nation, but the questions amount to generalized grievances which are not proper for the judiciary to address,” the district judge wrote.

The sheriff filed a notice of appeal saying that he will pursue the case in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

White House spokesman Eric Schultz said the court correctly dismissed the lawsuit.

“Judge Howell’s decision today confirms what the Department of Justice and scholars throughout the country have been saying all along - the president’s executive actions on immigration are lawful,” the spokesman said. “The Supreme Court and Congress have made clear that federal officials can set priorities in enforcing our immigration laws, and the actions announced by the president are consistent with those taken by administrations of both parties for the last half century.”

In the first courtroom battle over Obama’s plan, the County Sheriff’s lawyer Larry Klayman said on Monday that the president violated the Constitution by bypassing Congress. He argued that the program would let more immigrants enter the country illegally, burdening law enforcement as some commit crimes.

“It’s not policy, he’s creating law and he cannot do that under the U.S. Constitution,” the lawyer said of Mr. Obama.

In Monday’s courtroom argument, Justice Department lawyer Kathleen Hartnett said the lawsuit seemed to be raising a “political dispute” rather than a legal claim the court could address a position which Howell subsequently embraced in her decision.

The Maricopa County Sheriff has often clashed with the federal government over the enforcement of immigration laws and he has filed suit to stop new policies announced by Mr. Obama. He claims that federal officials have done a poor job of deporting immigrants living in the country illegally who commit crimes.

Under Mr. Obama’s program, the Homeland Security Department would prioritize the removal of immigrants who present threats to national security, public safety or border security.

At issue in the current dispute is the executive branch’s use on a massive scale of an enforcement tool known as “deferred action” to implement enforcement policies and priorities.

In the context of the immigration laws, deferred action represents a decision by the Homeland Security Department not to seek the removal of an immigrant for a set period of time.

In a separate lawsuit, Texas and 23 other states allege that Mr. Obama overstepped his constitutional powers in a way that will only worsen the humanitarian problems along the southern U.S. border. That suit is pending in a federal district court in Brownsville, Texas.

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