SUPREME COURT’S TIE DECISION BLOCKS PRESIDENT OBAMA’S IMMIGRATION EXECUTIVE ACTIONS, DELIVERING A VICTORY TO STATES CHALLENGING HIS REPRIEVE OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT DEPORTATIONS
The Supreme Court on Thursday blocked President Obama’s immigration executive actions, in a tie decision that delivers a win to states challenging his plan to give a deportation reprieve to millions of illegal immigrants.
The justices’ one-sentence opinion on Thursday effectively kills the plan for the duration of Obama’s presidency.
The 4-4 tie vote sets no national precedent but leaves in place the ruling by the lower court. In this case, the federal appeals court in New Orleans said the Obama administration lacked the authority to shield up to 4 million immigrants from deportation and make them eligible for work permits without approval from Congress.
Texas led 26 Republican-dominated states in challenging the program Obama announced in November 2014. Congressional Republicans also backed the states’ lawsuit.
The case dealt with two separate Obama programs. One would allow undocumented immigrants who are parents of either U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents to live and work in the U.S. without the threat of deportation. The other would expand an existing program to protect from deportation a larger population of immigrants who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children.
FoxNews.com/The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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