The U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case on Monday that tests the boundaries
of presidential powers, confronting the question of whether President Barack
Obama exceeded his authority with unilateral action to spare millions of people
in the country illegally from deportation.
The case,
one of the most consequential of the court's current term that ends in June,
pits Obama against 26 states led by Texas that filed suit to block his 2014
immigration plan.
The high
court is evenly divided with four liberal justices and four conservatives
following the February death of conservative Antonin Scalia. That raises the
possibility of a 4-4 split that would leave in place a 2015 lower-court ruling
that threw out the president's executive action that bypassed the
Republican-led Congress.
The
arguments in the case come at a time when immigration is a divisive issue in
the U.S. presidential campaign, with top Republican contenders advocating
deporting all of the estimated 11 million people in the country illegally.
Obama took
the action after Republicans in the House of Representatives killed bipartisan
legislation, billed as the biggest overhaul of U.S. immigration laws in decades
and providing a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants, that was passed by
the Senate in 2013.
Obama's
plan was tailored to let roughly 4 million people - those who have lived
illegally in the United States at least since 2010, have no criminal record and
have children who are U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents - get into a
program that shields them from deportation and supplies work permits.
Obama's
program was called Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful
Permanent Residents (DAPA).
Shortly
before the plan was to go into effect last year, a federal judge in Texas
blocked it after the Republican-governed states filed suit against the
Democratic president's executive action. The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals upheld that decision in November.
The
Supreme Court's ruling is due by the end of June.
Obama's
action arose from frustration within the White House and the immigrant
community about a lack of action in politically polarized Washington to address
the status of people, mostly Hispanics, living in the United States illegally.
Obama has
drawn Republican ire with his use of executive action to get around Congress on
immigration policy and other matters including gun control and healthcare. On
the immigration action, the states contend Obama exceeded the powers granted to
him by the Constitution by intruding upon the authority of Congress.
(Reporting
by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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