U.S. Supreme Court rejects Trump administration's bid to end DACA
Updated 08:56, 19-Jun-2020
CGTN

The U.S. Supreme court on Thursday rejected President Donald Trump's bid to cancel the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, a program protecting 700,000 undocumented migrants brought to the United States as children, according to local media reports.

DACA was established through an executive order by former President Barack Obama. It allowed the so-called dreamers to work, pay taxes and integrate into the legal economy of the only country they'd ever known as long as they didn't have a criminal record.

Earlier in 2017, Trump declared to the end of DACA, his administration claiming that Obama didn't have the power to create such a program without an act of Congress.

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In the high court's second rebuff of administration policies this week, justices said Trump's 2017 move to cancel his predecessor Barack Obama's landmark Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program was "arbitrary and capricious."

Chief Justice John Roberts, who sided with the court's liberal members in a five-to-four decision, stressed it was not an assessment of the correctness of the 2012 DACA program itself.

Instead, they said the Trump administration had violated government procedures in the way it sought to quickly rescind DACA in September 2017 based on weak legal justifications.

The ruling suggested there are legal administrative methods Trump could use to cancel DACA, putting the onus back on the administration if it wants to pursue the issue.

The decision gave a reprieve, though possibly only temporary, to hundreds of thousands of people brought or sent to the United States as youngsters. They grew up here, went to school, worked and started families – without ever having legal status.

An activisit holds a banner to celebrate in front of the U.S. Supreme Court after the Supreme Court rejected President Donald Trump's bid to end legal protections for young immigrants, in Washington, DC, the U.S. June 18, 2020. /AP

An activisit holds a banner to celebrate in front of the U.S. Supreme Court after the Supreme Court rejected President Donald Trump's bid to end legal protections for young immigrants, in Washington, DC, the U.S. June 18, 2020. /AP

Trump was angry after the court, which he has worked to stack with conservatives, dealt him his second legal setback in days.

On Monday the court ruled that constitutional protections against discrimination on the basis of sex covered homosexuals and transgender people, a position the Trump administration opposed.

In that case conservative Neil Gorsuch, named by Trump to the court in 2017, sided with Roberts and the four liberals in a six-to-three vote.

"Do you get the impression that the Supreme Court doesn't like me?" Trump tweeted.

"These horrible & politically charged decisions coming out of the Supreme Court are shotgun blasts into the face of people that are proud to call themselves Republicans or Conservatives," Trump wrote.

Obama, on the other hand, cheered Thursday's ruling. "Eight years ago this week, we protected young people who were raised as part of our American family from deportation," Obama tweeted.

"Today, I'm happy for them, their families, and all of us. We may look different and come from everywhere, but what makes us American are our shared ideals."

Trump entered office in January 2017 promising to end most immigration and to expel millions who live in the country without legal documents.

Unable to get Congress to agree on legislation to protect long-time resident immigrants, in 2012 the Obama administration turned to an executive order to implement DACA.

It offers people who entered the United States as children and grew up here authorization to stay, attend school, work and enjoy public benefits on renewable two-year periods.

The Supreme Court judgment made clear Trump could end DACA by other means, including an executive order.

It brought new calls Thursday for Congress to pass permanent legislation to help those under DACA, as well as to offer several million more people, including Dreamers' parents, protection from deportation.

Senior Democratic lawmakers Jerrold Nadler and Zoe Lofgren urged the Republican-controlled Senate "to immediately take up and pass H.R. 6, the American Dream and Promise Act, which puts Dreamers and long-term beneficiaries of Temporary Protected Status on a pathway to citizenship. The time to act is now."

(With input from AFP)