Close Menu
CCME | Études et actualités sur les Marocains du mondeCCME | Études et actualités sur les Marocains du monde
  • Home
  • Who are we
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the council
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world
  • Interviews
  • Archives of the council
    • Activities
    • Media and migration
    • News
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • Share a contribution
  • Home
  • Who are we
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the council
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world
  • Interviews
  • Archives of the council
    • Activities
    • Media and migration
    • News
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • Share a contribution
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
CCME | Études et actualités sur les Marocains du mondeCCME | Études et actualités sur les Marocains du monde
  • English
    • العربية
    • Français
  • Home
  • Who we are
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the Council
    • News of migration in the world
    • News of Moroccan migration
  • Resources
Podcasts بودكاست Podcasts
  • Spécial SIEL 2025
  • Programmation
  • Axes
    • Voix des amériques
    • Maroc-Belgique: Histoire, Migrations et commémorations
    • Migrations et sciences sociales : où en est la recherche sur les migrations marocaines ?
    • Écritures féminines au maroc et dans l’immigration
  • Rencontres
    • Rencontres et débats
    • Rencontres philosophiques
    • Cinéma une rétrospective des films pionniers du cinéma marocain sur l’émigration/immigration
  • Vient de paraitre
  • Hommages
CCME | Études et actualités sur les Marocains du mondeCCME | Études et actualités sur les Marocains du monde
  • English
    • العربية
    • Français
  • Spécial SIEL 2025
  • Programmation
  • Axes
  • Rencontres
  • Vient de paraitre
  • Hommages
Home»Archives of the council»Media and migration

No end in sight for immigrants on deportation roller coaster, experts say

Media and migration 11 May 2015
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp Copy Link
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email WhatsApp Copy Link

Millions of undocumented immigrants — and legions of immigration lawyers — are holding their breath. Last November they embarked on a legal roller coaster ride when President Barack Obama issued an executive action granting an estimated 5 million undocumented parents of U.S. citizen children temporary relief from deportation — a legal move that immigration scholars are increasingly starting to question.

The initial euphoria in the wake of Obama’s decree, known as Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents, or DAPA, was quickly extinguished. A federal judge in Texas blocked the action in February, after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, backed by 25 other states, filed a lawsuit citing the economic burden Obama’s action would impose on their state governments. The Obama administration, in turn, attempted to persuade an appeals court last month to lift the injunction.

But as the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals prepares to render a decision on Obama’s appeal in the coming days, prominent legal scholars are pointing to shortcomings in the administration’s decision to pursue executive action — and some of them believe it’s highly likely Obama’s move will ultimately fail in court.

Legal scholars say the Obama administration should have issued a longer-lasting formal regulation also known as a substantive rule, which would have protected immigrants from deportation, as opposed to a policy, which makes protection from deportation more of a privilege — a privilege that experts say can more easily be abolished.

Furthermore, analysts say, the administration should have more finely characterized who will benefit from deportation relief, and how broadly that relief is defined. According to immigration lawyers, this amounts to a strategic error that may come to define Obama’s immigration legacy — one already marred by the fact that the government has deported more than 2 million people under Obama’s watch.

“I think the rule is too narrow and should have been broader and covered the parents of Dreamers, not just the parents of citizens,” said Michael Winshie, a law professor at Yale University, referring to young undocumented immigrants brought to the United States by their parents. “Number two, I would have done it earlier. The president waited and waited, kept saying, ‘Oh, I’m going to try and work things out with Congress.’ Things never worked out,” he said, adding that it amounted to a failed political strategy to win the hearts and minds of Republicans.

As a result, immigrants face “an even more dysfunctional” system, says Peter Schey, executive director of the Los Angeles-based Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Rights, and one of the country’s pre-eminent immigration litigators.

At the heart of Obama’s legal problems, says Schey, is the difference between explaining and extending the law. “The administration decided to issue DAPA/DACA as a ‘policy’ (basically a ‘privilege’ for applicants) that can be changed overnight by any future administration,” he wrote in a widely circulated April 10 memo. What Obama should have released, he added, was a “formal ‘regulation’ (also called a ‘substantive rule’) that extends real rights to applicants and cannot be cancelled overnight.”

Though he believes that Republicans would have challenged DAPA regulations with just as much zeal, Schey said that issuing regulations would have made the administration’s case stronger. “Published regulations are more formal, more prevalent and give more rights than just issuing a policy by the head of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS),” he told Al Jazeera. One of the main reasons for the decision to issue a policy statement instead of a regulation, Schey said, is the deeply rooted opposition of DHS officials and employees to issuing regulations that empower immigrants by “giving people rights.”

Schey said re-issuing DAPA as a set of regulations could be a way to circumvent the legal opposition. “I think the outcomes of the challenge to this DAPA are very difficult to predict,” he said. “The best one can say is that the odds are 50-50.”

Maria Elena Hincapie, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center, was more optimistic.

“The Republicans and the opposition to these executive actions know that they’re eventually going to lose,” Hincapie said. “They know that it’s inevitable that these laws are eventually going to be implemented and that the law is very clear, and that the president acted within his constitutional authority.”

For his part, Muzaffar Chishti, director of the Migration Policy Institute office at the New York University School of Law, both credits and questions the Obama administration’s choices. He called Obama’s previous moves to reduce the number and kinds of people being deported “historic.” But he added that the Obama administration should have predicted the legal challenges that it now faces.

Regardless of what happens with the appeal of the preliminary injunction in the next few days, Chishti said, “We can predict that this is going to the Supreme Court.” That, he said, means that the legal roller coaster will not stop until mid-June of 2016.

“No one can predict how the Supreme Court will feel about it, but my guess is that this will be decided by Justice Kennedy,” Chishti said, referring to Justice Anthony Kennedy’s well-established role as the tie-breaking swing vote on the court. How he will vote on the executive order case is an open question.

But the more important issue to look at, he added, is that the people who brought the lawsuit may win, regardless of the outcome in court. “They (the Republicans) are not necessarily waiting to win the legal argument,” Chishti said. “They are biding time, trying to run out clock so that the executive actions do not see light of day in the Obama administration.”

Source: Aljazeera America

Related Posts

Paris Attacks: the intellectuals’ forecasts that we did not heed

30 November 2015

United States: Moroccan Taxi driver shot in the back on Thanksgiving Day

30 November 2015

Refugees welcome? How UK and Germany compare on migration

3 September 2015

Migration crisis: pressure mounts on Cameron over refugees

3 September 2015

Hundreds of migrants protest at Budapest station, want to go to Germany

3 September 2015

EU refugee crisis: World mourns Syrian toddler as Andy Burnham calls for emergency Parliament debate

3 September 2015

Our latest news

Rachid Guerraoui élu membre de l'Academia Europaea

Award: Rachid Guerraoui  elected to the Academia Europaea 

19 May 2025
الرئيس الفرنسي يعين رشيد بنزين عضوا في اللجنة الوطنية للأخلاقيات

France: Rachid Benzine appointed to the national Ethics Comitee for Life Sciences and Health

16 May 2025
مشروع قانون فرنسي يخرج الجمعيات من مراكز الاعتقال الإداري

France: A Senate bill to remove NGO’s from detention centers

13 May 2025
L'Espagne et le Maroc prévoient une augmentation du nombre d'utilisateurs de l'opération « Traversée du détroit 2025 »

 Spain and Morocco hold  the 36th Spanish-Moroccan Joint Commission meeting 

8 May 2025

النشرة الإخبارية

اشترك لتلقي آخر الأخبار

قم بتنزيل تطبيق المجلس

ولا تنس تفعيل الإشعارات للحصول على آخر الأخبار!

Download CCME books for Android
Download CCME books for IOS
Logo CCME
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

المجلس

  • Who we are
  • The President
  • The General Secretary
  • Working groups

الأخبار

  • News
  • News of Moroccan migration
  • News of migration in the world
موارد
اتصل بنا
  • محج الرياض. ش 10 ص.ب 21481 - حي الرياض - الرباط 10000 - المغرب
  • contact@ccme.org.ma
  • +212 5 37 56 71 71 اتصل بنا​

2025 - © المجلس

  • Right of access to information
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us

Newsletter

Subscribe to receive the latest news

Download the CCME app

And don’t forget to activate notifications to receive the latest news!

Download CCME books for IOS
Download CCME books for Android
Logo CCME
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
CCME
  • Who we are
  • The President
  • The General Secretary
  • Working groups
News
  • News
  • News of Moroccan migration
  • News of migration in the world
Resources
Contact
  • Mahaj Ryad. Imm 10. B.P 21481 - Hay Ryad - Rabat 10 000 - Morocco
  • contact@ccme.org.ma
  • +212 5 37 56 71 71
© 2025 - CCME
  • Right of access to information
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us

Revue de presse

Abonnez-vous pour recevoir notre revue de presse

    Téléchargez l’application CCME

    Et n’oubliez pas d’activer les notifications pour recevoir les dernières actualités!

    Download CCME books for IOS
    Download CCME books for Android
    Logo CCME
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

    CCME

    • Who we are
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups

    Actualités

    • News
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world

    Ressources

    Contact

    • Mahaj Ryad. Imm 10. B.P 21481 - Hay Ryad - Rabat 10 000 - Maroc
    • contact@ccme.org.ma
    • +212 5 37 56 71 71

    © 2025 - CCME

    • Right of access to information
    • Terms of use
    • Contact us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.