Supreme Court deals Donald Trump another stunning blow, rejecting his bid to end ‘Dreamers’ immigration protections

LGBTQ

“We do not decide whether DACA or its rescission are sound policies,” the chief justice wrote, who was also in the majority for the landmark LGBT+ civil rights ruling.

“We address only whether the agency complied with the procedural requirement that it provide a reasoned explanation for its action.”

He dubbed the administration’s actions as “arbitrary and capricious” under a federal law called the Administrative Procedure Act.

With the end of the Department of Homeland Security v Regents of the University of California, Trump took to Twitter to blast the decision.

But a result of the ruling, the lives of hundreds of thousands of immigrants – many young Hispanic adults born in Mexico – enrolled in DACA will remain protected from deportation.

For queer youth enrolled in DACA, many will no doubt breathe a sigh of relief tonight. The programme provided economic security and bolster their educational attainment, no longer rattled by the threat of deportation to countries that many do not even remember.

Many queer Dreamers on DACA pleaded that pulling the program would certainly plunge many into homelessness, according to a press release from the True Colors Fund.

Pro-immigration activists gather in front of the US Supreme Court on April 18, 2016 in Washington, DC. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Pro-immigration activists gather in front of the US Supreme Court on April 18, 2016 in Washington, DC. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Many of them, the youth homelessness group said, would have been sent back to countries where anti-LGBT+ laws and views are commonplace.

The program was first introduced by Barack Obama in 2012. It allowed young people brought to the US as children to apply for a temporary status that shields them from deportation and allowed them to work.

The two-year-long status, while renewable, was not a pathway to citizenship. Trump announced September 2017 he planned to peel back the campaign, and his, as well as his government’s justifications, were, to the Supreme Court, insufficient.

Now Trump’s swarth of officials but seek to find new, more robust ways to justify the deportation of Dreamers to the lower courts.

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