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Trump Administration Fails Again to Sway Judge on DACA Plan

Trump's DHS Fails Again to Justify Scrapping DACA, Judge Says

(Bloomberg) -- The Trump administration failed again to convince a federal judge that there’s a legitimate reason to rescind legal protections for hundreds of thousands of young undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children and seek to avoid deportation.

U.S. District Judge John Bates in Washington said Friday that a second attempt by the Department of Homeland Security to offer a "rational explanation" for the agency’s decision had fallen short. Bates had given Nielsen another shot after blocking the plan in April.

"The court has already once given DHS the opportunity to remedy these deficiencies -- either by providing a coherent explanation of its legal opinion or by re-issuing its decision for bona fide policy reasons that would preclude judicial review -- so it will not do so again," Bates said.

The plan to rescind the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, known as DACA, has also been put on hold by courts in California and New York. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco is reviewing one such ruling after having heard oral arguments in May.

Bates gave the administration 20 days to decide whether it would appeal before he blocks the DACA rescission. The judge called the plan “virtually unexplained,” but said he wasn’t asserting that DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen didn’t have authority to rescind it.

"The court simply holds that if DHS wishes to rescind the program -- or to take any other action, for that matter -- it must give a rational explanation for its decision," Bates said. “A conclusory assertion that a prior policy is illegal, accompanied by a hodgepodge of illogical or post hoc policy assertions, simply will not do.”

According to the decision Friday, the memo from Nielsen included several justifications for scrapping DACA, including saying it is "critically important for DHS to project a message that leaves no doubt regarding the clear, consistent and transparent enforcement of the immigration laws."

DACA was rescinded in September 2017 after Attorney General Jeff Sessions determined the program was likely an "unconstitutional usurpation of Congressional authority," DHS spokeswoman Katie Waldman said in an email.

"The DACA program that is hanging on due to court injunctions only provides protection for two years at a time and could end at any moment," Waldman said. "The reason why we are in the current predicament is because Congress has failed to act and provide DACA recipients a permanent solution."

DACA recipients across the U.S. allege the plan to rescind their legal protections will result in close to 1 million people being forced from their homes and deported to nations they barely remember. Many of them have U.S.-citizen children and spouses, meaning thousands of families would be separated.

To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Larson in New York at elarson4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Glovin at dglovin@bloomberg.net, Joe Schneider

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