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West Virginia Law Review

Document Type

Article

Abstract

This Article explores how Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) emerged both from thwarted efforts at immigration reform and the Supreme Court's highly anticipated decision in Arizona v. UnitedStates.' I ar- gue that DACA not only was adopted in response to repeated failed efforts to pass the DREAM Act; it was also promulgated in anticipation of a possible fa- vorable ruling by the Court on S.B. 1070. In Part I, I examine the current sepa- ration of powers crisis in immigration policy. I look at both the context in which DACA was adopted and at challenges to DACA in Court and in Con- gress. I classify the constitutional arguments against DACA into four different categories: 1) The Youngstown/Curtiss-Wright Dichotomy; 2) The Non- Delegation Doctrine Resurrection; 3) The "Take Care" Clause Crisis; and 4) The Notice and Comment Myth. In Part II, I address the federalism crisis. I ar- gue that DACA was aimed at least in part at weakening the potential impact of S.B. 1070 by carving out a class of individuals who the states could not target and placing them in a quasi-legal status that hopefully would immunize them from state enforcement of the immigration laws. I examine deferred action as one of many twilight statuses where beneficiaries enjoy temporary relief from removal, (often) eligibility for work authorization, and (sometimes) the pro- spect of lawful residency. I look briefly at subfederal responses to DACA, in- cluding several states' denial of driver's licenses to DACA recipients. I ulti- mately conclude that DACA was a justifiable assertion of Executive authority in the face of gridlock in Congress and restrictionism in many states. DACA fell squarely within Executive enforcement powers under an expansive inter- pretation of congressional and Executive authority that has deep roots in the plenary power doctrine, case law going back over a century, the well- established use of deferred action and similar forms of prosecutorial discretion, and the broad delegation of powers by Congress to the Executive under the Immigration & Nationality Act. In short, like Dorothy's ruby slippers, the Ad- ministration's power was there all along. In announcing DACA on the eves of the Court's decision in Arizona v. United States and the 2012 elections, the Obama Administration took a bold political move that not only may have won him the election but may have reenergized his Administration, restored balance in the government, and laid the foundation for comprehensive immigration re- form. At the same time the Administration in its final term needs to work with- in the constraints of the Constitution, focus on reform in Congress, and not es- tablish a precedent for unilateralism that will be subject to abuse in future administrations.

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