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You guys seem to want to convince me to be upset with the judge's ruling, like you are.
Sorry, I don't have a problem with holding the Trump administration's feet to the fire to reasonably justify, to the courts and the American people, why they want to rescind DACA.
Then you have no issue with any judge placing any restriction on Congress or the Presidency.
And that will come back to bite you.
Once that happens, I don't want to hear a peep about how terrible it is that these people are being deported back to their country of origin.
Unless it is a law confirmed by congress, the justice system does not have a say in it, period.
Trump admin does not have to justify any reason to terminate an existing EO.
It's called checks and balances.
Don't put this on me!
Trump declared an end to DACA, not Congress, not the courts. He didn't have to do it.
The majority of American don't want to see DACA recipients deported. Yeah, they want Congress to act, but Trump won't let them.
I'm one of them!
We'll see.
originally posted by: Sookiechacha
a reply to: TheRedneck
Then you have no issue with any judge placing any restriction on Congress or the Presidency.
It's called checks and balances.
Overview
Federal courts will refuse to hear a case if they find that it presents a political question. This doctrine refers to the idea that an issue is so politically charged that federal courts, which are typically viewed as the apolitical branch of government, should not hear the issue. The doctrine is also referred to as the justiciability doctrine or the nonjusticiability doctrine.
Applying the Doctrine
In Oetjen v. Central Leather Co. (1918), which is one of the earliest examples of the Supreme Court applying the political question doctrine, the Court found that the conduct of foreign relations is the sole responsibility of the Executive Branch. As such, the Court found that cases which challenge the way in which the Executive uses that power present political questions. Thus, the Court held that it cannot preside over these issues.
The Court broadened this ruling in Baker v Carr (1962), when it held that federal courts should not hear cases which deal directly with issues that the Constitution makes the sole responsibility of the Executive Branch and/or the Legislative Branch.
The Court in Nixon v. United States (1993) also extended this doctrine to which lawsuits which challenge the Legislative Branch's procedure for impeachment proceedings.
Further, the Supreme Court has chosen to apply the doctrine in more cases related to the Executive Branch than in cases related to the Legislative Branch.
Justiciability refers to the types of matters that the federal courts can adjudicate. If a case is "nonjusticiable." a federal court cannot hear it. To be justiciable, the court must not be offering an advisory opinion, the plaintiff must have standing, and the issues must be ripe but neither moot nor violative of the political question doctrine.
The judges ruling will be overturned.
There is no DACA law.
There is no DAPA law.
As for the ball being in Trumps court it is, and as we told you several times now the DOJ is appealing the ruling.
Because they are not laws contrary to what this one judge thinks.
www.npr.org...
"Garaufis said the administration can rescind DACA. But the judge said the reasoning behind its decision was flawed. The Justice Department argues that DACA was an illegal overreach by the Obama White House, and was likely to be overturned in court."
Garaufis, however, said the government was "erroneous" in its conclusion that DACA was unconstitutional and that it violated the Administrative Procedures and Immigration and Nationality acts. He said President Trump's termination of DACA was "arbitrary and capricious."
Why do you keep saying this? It matters not in this argument.