Federal judge indefinitely blocks Biden government’s 100-day moratorium on most deportations

Houston – A federal judge on Tuesday indefinitely banned President Joe Biden’s administration from imposing a 100-day moratorium on most deportations. U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton issued an injunction requested by Texas, which argued that the moratorium violated federal law and implied additional costs for the state.

Biden proposed a 100-day break in deportations during his campaign as part of a broader review of immigration enforcement and an attempt to reverse former President Donald Trump’s priorities.

Biden proposed a comprehensive immigration law that would allow the legalization of about 11 million people living illegally in the United States. He also instituted other guidelines on who immigration and border agents should aim for enforcement.

Trump-appointed Tipton initially decided on January 26 that the moratorium violated federal law on administrative procedures and that the U.S. failed to show why a pause in deportation was justified. A temporary restraining order issued by the judge was set to expire on Tuesday.

Tipton’s decision did not require deportations to resume at an earlier rate. Even without a moratorium, immigration agencies have ample latitude to enforce removals and prosecute cases.

But in the days following his decision, the authorities deported 15 people to Jamaica and hundreds more to Central America. The Biden government also continued to expel immigrants in a separate lawsuit initiated by Trump officials, who invoked public health law due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Texas American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Kate Huddleston reacted angrily to the latest decision, saying in a statement that, “Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton continues to … seek to force the Biden government to follow former President Trump’s xenophobic policies. Allowing these deportations to continue means that families will be torn apart and that people who have the opportunity to seek help in the United States will be returned to danger. “

The legal dispute over the ban on deportation is one of the first signs of Republican opposition to Biden’s immigration priorities, just as Democrats and pro-immigrant legal groups fought against Trump’s proposals. Almost four years before Tipton’s order, Trump signed a travel ban from seven countries with a predominantly Muslim population, which caused chaos at airports. Legal groups have successfully sued to prevent the ban from being implemented.

It was not immediately clear whether the Biden government would appeal to Tipton’s latest decision. The Justice Department did not request the suspension of Tipton’s previous temporary restraining order.

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