The Sanctuary-Cities Executive Order Is Trump’s Next Legal Train Wreck

Best Virginia

Redshirt
Feb 17, 2017
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Two days before issuing his first, ill-fated travel ban, which triggered chaos at airports around the world, President Donald Trump issued a related executive order which has caused a less visible form of bedlam at city halls and county seats throughout the country.

With Executive Order 13768, issued on January 25, Trump purported to empower the attorney general and secretary of Homeland Security to cut off and claw back federal funds that go to so-called “sanctuary” cities.

“We are going to strip federal grant money to the sanctuary states and cities that harbor illegal immigrants,” Press Secretary Sean Spicer vowed, explaining the purpose of the diktat. The order furthered a key Trump campaign promise: “We will end the sanctuary cities that have resulted in so many needless deaths,” Trump said last August. “Cities that refuse to cooperate with federal [immigration] authorities will not receive taxpayer dollars.”

On April 14, the city of San Francisco and County of Santa Clara (which includes San Jose, Palo Alto, and much of Silicon Valley) will go to federal court in San Francisco and ask U.S. District Judge William Orrick to block the order. The plaintiffs, which have received support from 34 other municipalities and scores of nonprofit social-welfare agencies (which survive on federal funds passed through municipalities), are two of at least six cities or counties that have sued over the order. According to Washington Post research, there are between 165 and 608 municipalities in the country that might be considered “sanctuary jurisdictions,” depending on how one defines that term. Characteristically, the executive order does not bother to offer its own definition except by implication, heightening confusion among municipal officials.

The lawsuits bear some obvious similarities to the travel-ban litigations we have already seen, yet they also have marked differences. The key parallel is that the order being challenged appears to have been drafted in haste and with astonishingly little input from experts. The difference is that its constitutional flaws appear to be multilayered, fundamental, and unsalvageable. The second travel ban — after substantial revision by competent lawyers — is now defensible as written, and becomes vulnerable only if one considers its overtly anti-Muslim provenance. It may well pass muster before our majority-conservative Supreme Court, now that Judge Neil Gorsuch is officially seated.

The same cannot be said of the sanctuary-cities order, which appears to offend the principles of separation of powers, due process, and interpretations of both the Tenth Amendment (establishing that the federal government only has powers specifically delegated to it by the Constitution) and limits on Congress’s spending power that have been mainly championed by conservative justices — including President Trump’s own claimed judicial hero, Antonin Scalia.


“Even if the executive order were an act of Congress, or authorized by one, it would be unconstitutional,” write Santa Clara’s lawyers, from the law firm of Keker, Van Nest & Peters, in the county’s complaint. But, of course, it is neither.


So far, in fact, the Justice Department has not disputed the Keker lawyers’ crushing legal critique of the executive order. Instead, it has adopted a version of the now-familiar refrain with which the president’s lawyers and handlers defend so many of his statements: We mustn’t take him so literally.


The order’s defunding provision “does not change existing law,” the Justice Department lawyers argued in papers filed last month — a stunning claim that makes one wonder what was the point of the section, or of the fanfare surrounding it. They suggest that the order need not be applied as broadly as its literal language might permit. Since the secretary of Homeland Security has not yet designated any city a “sanctuary jurisdiction” — the event that, according to the order’s terms, triggers the attorney general’s obligation to take “appropriate enforcement action” — they argue that the lawsuits are premature (or, “not ripe,” in lawyers’ terms), and that the plaintiffs lack “standing” to sue (i.e., haven’t been harmed yet) and do not face “irreparable harm” (a necessary condition before they can win a court injunction blocking the order).


If the Justice Department is correct, then, might the defunding threat really have just been an empty, symbolic propaganda gesture?

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligence...s-order-is-trumps-next-legal-train-wreck.html
 

Brushy Bill

Hall of Famer
Mar 31, 2009
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He has the SC in his favor now. I would hope that any lower court judge would take this into consideration.
 

BoremanSouth

Redshirt
Jul 28, 2016
1,715
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The SCOTUS has to uphold the constitution. And Mr. Trump has serious difficulty with understanding the term "constitutional." Lower court judges will be fine.
 

Brushy Bill

Hall of Famer
Mar 31, 2009
52,925
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What EXACTLY was unconstitutional about the Presidential restriction of n travel into the United States, and with the distribution of Federal Funds?
 

bamaEER

Freshman
May 29, 2001
32,435
60
0
What EXACTLY was unconstitutional about the Presidential restriction of n travel into the United States, and with the distribution of Federal Funds?
Obama tried this very thing, withholding federal funding for states not complying with medicaid expansion and the SC shut it down (10th amendment I believe). Simply put, you can't extort federal funding like this.
 

Best Virginia

Redshirt
Feb 17, 2017
525
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0
What EXACTLY was unconstitutional about the Presidential restriction of n travel into the United States, and with the distribution of Federal Funds?
According to San Francisco’s lawsuit, the order “commandeers state and local governments in violation of the 10th Amendment to the Constitution.” In other words, the federal government intends to enlist the help of the 765,000 or so law enforcement officers who work for state and local governments to enforce federal immigration laws. This is cheaper for the federal government than hiring more agents, but it is costly to unwilling state and local governments. That’s the “commandeering” problem at the heart of this legal challenge.


San Francisco’s challenge to President Trump’s immigration policies draws on an unlikely precedent: a Montana sheriff’s challenge to federal gun control policy. More cities are considering similar challenges. The city of Seattle has filed suit. In my work on constitutional law, I study how principles of federalism established by deep red rural counties against a liberal national policy agenda are now serving deep blue urban cities resisting a conservative national policy agenda.


Federalism: Reconciling red and blue states

In these legal challenges, red and blue states agree on at least one thing – the federal government’s powers are limited under the Constitution. This principle might save what some commentators have called a “bad marriage” between increasingly polarized red and blue states. Our federal system of government allows diverse state policy agendas. Under federalism, state and local dissenters retain some power to govern themselves. This can help soften the blow of national political victories for losing parties.


San Francisco’s case against Trump cites a lawsuit filed in rural Ravalli County, Montana in the first year of President Clinton’s term. Clinton lost the county in a landslide, though not as badly as Trump lost San Francisco. In his first term, Clinton signed the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act of 1993, or the “Brady Bill.”


The law requires background checks for handgun purchases. The law required local law enforcement officers to run the background checks until the federal system was up and running. That did not sit well with Jay Printz, an old-school Montana sheriff who eventually would join the National Rifle Association’s board of directors. The Brady Bill’s mandate conflicted with Montana law, which prohibited Printz from regulating firearm purchases.


So, he sued. He took his case all the way to the Supreme Court and won. In a 5-4 opinion authored by the late Justice Antonin Scalia, the court held that the “Federal Government may neither issue directives requiring the States to address particular problems, nor command the States’ officers, or those of their political subdivisions, to administer or enforce a federal regulatory program.”


It relied on the 10th Amendment to the United States Constitution, which states: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” The justices interpreted the Constitution as reserving control over state officials to the states alone. The ruling prohibited federal commandeering of state officials like Sheriff Printz by enlisting them to enforce federal law.


It also meant that as long as the federal government is not coercive, making an offer the states can’t refuse, it can persuade them with the promise of federal funding. For example, in 1987, South Dakota challenged the federal government’s withholding of a small share of highway funding if the state did not raise its drinking age to 21. The Supreme Court allowed the spending condition as a “relatively mild encouragement” to follow federal policy. Yet, it warned that at some point, “pressure turns into compulsion.”


The Supreme Court found the government reached that point in 2012, when it struck down the Affordable Care Act’s expansion of Medicaid. Under the act, holdout states were faced with losing around 10 percent of their total budgets if they refused to accept the Medicaid expansion.
 

atlkvb

All-Conference
Jul 9, 2004
80,053
1,985
113
Two days before issuing his first, ill-fated travel ban, which triggered chaos at airports around the world, President Donald Trump issued a related executive order which has caused a less visible form of bedlam at city halls and county seats throughout the country.

With Executive Order 13768, issued on January 25, Trump purported to empower the attorney general and secretary of Homeland Security to cut off and claw back federal funds that go to so-called “sanctuary” cities.

“We are going to strip federal grant money to the sanctuary states and cities that harbor illegal immigrants,” Press Secretary Sean Spicer vowed, explaining the purpose of the diktat. The order furthered a key Trump campaign promise: “We will end the sanctuary cities that have resulted in so many needless deaths,” Trump said last August. “Cities that refuse to cooperate with federal [immigration] authorities will not receive taxpayer dollars.”

On April 14, the city of San Francisco and County of Santa Clara (which includes San Jose, Palo Alto, and much of Silicon Valley) will go to federal court in San Francisco and ask U.S. District Judge William Orrick to block the order. The plaintiffs, which have received support from 34 other municipalities and scores of nonprofit social-welfare agencies (which survive on federal funds passed through municipalities), are two of at least six cities or counties that have sued over the order. According to Washington Post research, there are between 165 and 608 municipalities in the country that might be considered “sanctuary jurisdictions,” depending on how one defines that term. Characteristically, the executive order does not bother to offer its own definition except by implication, heightening confusion among municipal officials.

The lawsuits bear some obvious similarities to the travel-ban litigations we have already seen, yet they also have marked differences. The key parallel is that the order being challenged appears to have been drafted in haste and with astonishingly little input from experts. The difference is that its constitutional flaws appear to be multilayered, fundamental, and unsalvageable. The second travel ban — after substantial revision by competent lawyers — is now defensible as written, and becomes vulnerable only if one considers its overtly anti-Muslim provenance. It may well pass muster before our majority-conservative Supreme Court, now that Judge Neil Gorsuch is officially seated.

The same cannot be said of the sanctuary-cities order, which appears to offend the principles of separation of powers, due process, and interpretations of both the Tenth Amendment (establishing that the federal government only has powers specifically delegated to it by the Constitution) and limits on Congress’s spending power that have been mainly championed by conservative justices — including President Trump’s own claimed judicial hero, Antonin Scalia.


“Even if the executive order were an act of Congress, or authorized by one, it would be unconstitutional,” write Santa Clara’s lawyers, from the law firm of Keker, Van Nest & Peters, in the county’s complaint. But, of course, it is neither.


So far, in fact, the Justice Department has not disputed the Keker lawyers’ crushing legal critique of the executive order. Instead, it has adopted a version of the now-familiar refrain with which the president’s lawyers and handlers defend so many of his statements: We mustn’t take him so literally.


The order’s defunding provision “does not change existing law,” the Justice Department lawyers argued in papers filed last month — a stunning claim that makes one wonder what was the point of the section, or of the fanfare surrounding it. They suggest that the order need not be applied as broadly as its literal language might permit. Since the secretary of Homeland Security has not yet designated any city a “sanctuary jurisdiction” — the event that, according to the order’s terms, triggers the attorney general’s obligation to take “appropriate enforcement action” — they argue that the lawsuits are premature (or, “not ripe,” in lawyers’ terms), and that the plaintiffs lack “standing” to sue (i.e., haven’t been harmed yet) and do not face “irreparable harm” (a necessary condition before they can win a court injunction blocking the order).


If the Justice Department is correct, then, might the defunding threat really have just been an empty, symbolic propaganda gesture?

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligence...s-order-is-trumps-next-legal-train-wreck.html

Best Virginia's reason for posting the article against Trump:

I didn't actually read this article I posted, so don't assume I even know what's in it or even agree with it. It could be right, or could be total BS...I wouldn't know. I just posted it to get the information out to the board. Don't assume I agree with what's in it either. Don't lie on me if you don't even know why I posted it and I'm telling you I didn't read it. Stop assuming why I post stuff against Trump all the time that I don't read!
 
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