Guns and Guitars

minisgunsandguitarsYoutube

Two years ago, I scored a 2006 Fender Telecaster that needed new paint and new frets. Paying an experienced luthier to do the work would’ve cost twice as much as the guitar, so I decided to do it myself with the assistance of Daniel Thompson’s Guns and Guitars channel on YouTube.

Thompson’s pitch is that relatively handy people can modify their own guitars (and guns) using inexpensive, simple, and sometimes homemade tools. The focus on thrift and utility over prestige and features makes Guns and Guitars the perfect resource for neophytes who don’t want to spend just as much (or more) on equipment as they would on an expert’s help.

If Thompson can’t show you how to make a functional tool out of scrap, he’ll advocate the cheapest one that will produce the best results—the perfect ethos for uncertain times.

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Brickbat: Isn’t This How World War II Started?

polishczechflags_1161x653

The Polish government admits its troops briefly invaded and occupied part of the Czech Republic but says it was all a “misunderstanding.” A Czech government official explained, “Polish soldiers mistakenly deterred our citizens from entering a church on the Czech territory in close vicinity of the Czech-Polish borders.” The Polish government says troops aiding its border guard simply set up a guard station in the wrong location. Both sides say the matter was quickly resolved and there are no hard feelings.

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Brickbat: Isn’t This How World War II Started?

polishczechflags_1161x653

The Polish government admits its troops briefly invaded and occupied part of the Czech Republic but says it was all a “misunderstanding.” A Czech government official explained, “Polish soldiers mistakenly deterred our citizens from entering a church on the Czech territory in close vicinity of the Czech-Polish borders.” The Polish government says troops aiding its border guard simply set up a guard station in the wrong location. Both sides say the matter was quickly resolved and there are no hard feelings.

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Why the DACA Rescission Failed CJ Robert’s APA “Severability” Analysis

Yesterday, I posted my high-level analysis of DHS v. Regents of California, the DACA case. This lengthy post will dive deeper into the weeds. I’ll presume familiarity with the facts of the case, the history of the litigation, and knowledge of basic APA doctrine.

Chief Justice Roberts’s analysis has eight major parts.

First, Roberts held that the DACA rescission is subject to judicial review. This conclusion is significant. In 2016, the Obama administration argued that DAPA itself was not subject to review because DAPA was a general non-enforcement policy. And in 2020, the Trump administration argued that the DACA rescission was not subject to review, because the rescission was also a general non-enforcement policy. (Republican and Democratic agencies agree on little but non-reviewability). But Roberts rejects both positions. He argues that DACA “is not simply a non-enforcement policy.” Why? Critically, the policy confers benefits:

The benefits attendant to deferred action provide further confirmation that DACA is more than simply a non-enforcement policy. As described above, by virtue of receiving deferred action, the 700,000 DACA recipients may request work authorization and are eligible for Social Security and Medicare. Unlike an agency’s refusal to take requested enforcement action, access to these types of benefits is an interest “courts often are called upon to protect.” Chaney. Because the DACA program is more than a non-enforcement policy, its rescission is subject to review under the APA.

Defenders of DACA have long argued that the policy is merely an act of prioritization: certain people are de-prioritized for removal. Chief Justice Roberts has killed that argument. As a result, Texas’s long-pending challenge to DACA has now cleared the reviewability hurdle. That case can proceed to the merits. These holdings were small concessions for the Court’s four liberals to pay for a favorable judgment.

Second, Chief Justice Roberts limited his review to the Duke memorandum, and disregards the Nielsen memorandum. I think this analysis is correct. The Nielsen memo added additional justifications that were not in the agency action. Roberts write:

The policy reasons that Secretary Nielsen cites as a third basis for the rescission are also nowhere to be found in the Duke Memorandum. That document makes no mention of a preference for legislative fixes, the superiority of case-by-case decisionmaking, the importance of sending a message of robust enforcement, or any other policy consideration. Nor are these points included in the legal analysis from the Fifth Circuit and the Attorney General. They can be viewed only as impermissible post hoc rationalizations and thus are not properly before us.

Judge Bates put the administration in a tough bind. They did the best they could.

Third, Roberts finds that the rescission is arbitrary and capricious. But he expressly rejects the approaches of three courts of appeals. These courts held that the Secretary was wrong to rely on the Fifth Circuit’s decision, because the Fifth Circuit was wrong. For example, the Ninth Circuit held that the Fifth Circuit erred in Texas v. U.S. Therefore, the Secretary’s analysis was arbitrary and capricious:

DACA is being implemented in a manner that reflects discretionary, case-by-case review, and at least one of the Fifth Circuit’s key rationales in striking down DAPA is inapplicable with respect to DACA. With respect for our sister circuit, we find the analysis that seemingly compelled the result in Texas entirely inapposite. And because the Acting Secretary was therefore incorrect in her belief that DACA was illegal and had to be rescinded, plaintiffs are likely to succeed in demonstrating that the rescission must be set aside. Chenery I, 318 U.S. at 94.

But Chief Justice Roberts did not adopt this approach. He did not disagree with the Fifth Circuit’s decision. He could have. That holding would have made this case much easier. To the contrary, he recited the Fifth Circuit’s analysis without any criticism whatsoever.

Does this recitation suggest Roberts agrees with Judges Smith and Elrod? Possibly. Roberts explains that Secretary Duke was “bound by the Attorney General’s legal determination” concerning Texas v. U.S. He added, “Whether DACA is illegal is, of course, a legal determination, and therefore a question for the Attorney General.” Even if the Attorney General relied on an erroneous precedent, the DHS Secretary could not have disagreed. But I am inclined to believe that Roberts endorsed the Fifth Circuit’s rationale. I’ll explain why in the next part.

Fourth, Roberts concludes that part of DACA is lawful: specifically, the power to forbear removal. The legal debate only concerned the conferral of benefits, such as work authorization. Roberts doesn’t quite say that conferring benefits is illegal. In his typical fashion, Roberts hedges on all important legal questions. The manner in which he relies on the Fifth Circuit suggests he leans that way. But it is ultimately noncommittal. I don’t think the rest of the Kagan Court would have joined a more express analysis.

Let’s walk through the Court’s discussion of the Smith/Elrod decision. Roberts explains that the “core” of the challenge involved conferring benefits.

But Duke did not appear to appreciate the full scope of her discretion, which picked up where the Attorney General’s legal reasoning left off. The Attorney General concluded that “the DACA policy has the same legal … defects that the courts recognized as to DAPA.” So, to understand those defects, we look to the Fifth Circuit, the highest court to offer a reasoned opinion on the legality of DAPA. That court described the “core” issue before it as the “Secretary’s decision” to grant “eligibility for benefits”—including work authorization, Social Security, and Medicare—to unauthorized aliens on “a class-wide basis.” The Fifth Circuit’s focus on these benefits was central to every stage of its analysis. And the Court ultimately held that DAPA was “manifestly contrary to the INA” precisely because it “would make 4.3 million otherwise removable aliens” eligible for work authorization and public benefits.

Roberts added an important footnote: forbearance from removal is separate from conferring benefits.

 FN5: As the Fifth Circuit noted, DAPA recipients were eligible for Social Security and Medicare benefits because they had been designated “lawfully present.” Lawful presence is a statutory prerequisite for receipt of certain benefits. It is not the same as forbearance nor does it flow inexorably from forbearance. Thus, while deferred action recipients have been designated lawfully present for purposes of Social Security and Medicare eligibility, agencies can also exclude them from this designation, see 45 CFR § 152.2(8) (2019) (specifying that DACA recipients are not considered lawfully present for purposes of coverage under the Affordable Care Act).

Later, Roberts would fault Duke for not expressly excluding DACA recipients from the regulations for purposes of the benefits.

He explains that the essential element of DACA is forbearance from removal.

But there is more to DAPA (and DACA) than such benefits. The defining feature of deferred action is the decision to defer removal (and to notify the affected alien of that decision). And the Fifth Circuit was careful to distinguish that forbearance component from eligibility for benefits. … In other words, the Secretary’s forbearance authority was unimpaired.

Did the Fifth Circuit restrict Dukes’s power to halt deportations? No. And the failure to address that element was an error.

In short, the Attorney General neither addressed the forbearance policy at the heart of DACA nor compelled DHS to abandon that policy. Thus, removing benefits eligibility while continuing forbearance remained squarely within the discretion of Acting Secretary Duke, who was responsible for “[e]stablishing national immigration enforcement policies and priorities.” 6 U. S. C. § 202(5). But Duke’s memo offers no reason for terminating forbearance. She instead treated the Attorney General’s conclusion regarding the illegality of benefits as sufficient to rescind both benefits and forbearance, without explanation….

Roberts’s analysis resembles something of a severability framework. He assumed (and perhaps agreed) that part of DACA was unlawful: the conferral of benefits. But other parts were perfectly permissible: forbearing removal. The Secretary’s decision to halt the entire policy thus botched severability. She used a sledgehammer, rather than a scalpel. Because Dukes’s failed to properly sever the impermissible portion of the DACA memorandum, her entire rescission is arbitrary and capricious.

Think about that remedy for a moment. Perhaps the Court could have used a severability analysis for the rescission memo. That is, hold that DHS has justified the cancellation of benefits, but has not justified the cancellation of forbearance. (I privately speculated about such an outcome–let the Dreamers stay, but they can’t work). Roberts could have vacated part of the rescission memo, but left other parts intact. He didn’t. He vacated the entire memo. And why did Roberts use a sledgehammer instead of a scalpel? Because Dukes used a sledgehammer instead of a scalpel. In other words, Duke’s punishment for failing to sever DACA, was Robert’s decision not to sever the rescission memo. A delicious John Roberts blue plate special.

Sixth, Roberts grounds his severability analysis in the admin law chestnut, State Farm.

There, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) promulgated a requirement that motor vehicles produced after 1982 be equipped with one of two passive restraints: airbags or automatic seatbelts. Four years later, before the requirement went into effect, NHTSA concluded that automatic seatbelts, the restraint of choice for most manufacturers, would not provide effective protection. Based on that premise, NHTSA rescinded the passive restraint requirement in full.

We concluded that the total rescission was arbitrary and capricious. As we explained, NHTSA’s justification supported only “disallow[ing] compliance by means of ” automatic seatbelts. It did “not cast doubt” on the “efficacy of airbag technology” or upon “the need for a passive restraint standard.” Given NHTSA’s prior judgment that “airbags are an effective and cost-beneficial lifesaving technology,” we held that “the mandatory passive restraint rule [could] not be abandoned without any consideration whatsoever of an airbags-only requirement.”

Roberts then applies this framework to the DACA rescission:

While the factual setting is different here, the error is the same. Even if it is illegal for DHS to extend work authorization and other benefits to DACA recipients, that conclusion supported only “disallow[ing]” benefits. It did “not cast doubt” on the legality of forbearance or upon DHS’s original reasons for extending forbearance to childhood arrivals. Thus, given DHS’s earlier judgment that forbearance is “especially justified” for “productive young people” who were brought here as children and “know only this country as home,” the DACA Memorandum could not be rescinded in full “without any consideration whatsoever” of a forbearance-only policy, State Farm.

Dukes’s flaw was rescinding DACA “in full.” What should she have done instead? Roberts offers a proposal in a footnote:

DHS could have addressed the Attorney General’s determination that such benefits were impermissible under the INA by amending 8 CFR § 1.3 to exclude DACA recipients from those benefits without rescinding the DACA Memorandum and the forbearance policy it established. But Duke’s rescission memo shows no cognizance of this possibility.

Dukes’s failed to address this partial-illegality, and the precise remedy Roberts conjured up.

The SG tried to preempt this point in his reply brief. DOJ was obviously worried about this anti-saving construction:

The Government acknowledges that “[d]eferred action coupled with the associated benefits are the two legs upon which the DACA policy stands.” Reply Brief 21. It insists, however, that “DHS was not required to consider whether DACA’s illegality could be addressed by separating” the two. Ibid. According to the Government, “It was not arbitrary and capricious for DHS to view deferred action and its collateral benefits as importantly linked.”

No such luck.

Perhaps. But that response misses the point. The fact that there may be a valid reason not to separate deferred action from benefits does not establish that DHS considered that option or that such consideration was unnecessary.

In short, DHS is to be faulted for not considering a more narrowly tailored way to accomplish their goal. I framed that test quite deliberately. Roberts’s test resembles strict scrutiny. Roberts applied an over-inclusiveness standard to the arbitrary and capricious standard. Indeed, it is even stricter than strict scrutiny: the failure to anticipate the precise remedy that the Chief Justice–and no one else–conjured up has rendered the action unlawful.

Indeed, this approach resembles the mirror image of the rational basis test. With rational basis review, the Court can manufacture reasons to uphold a governmental policy, even if the government did not actually entertain that justification. Roberts flips the script. He manufactures reasons to invalidate a governmental policy, even if no one–not a single judge, litigant, or even academic–considered it. Roberts moved the goal posts. No agency can possibly conceive of every possible way to address a problem.

Seventh, Roberts responds to Justice Thomas, who criticizes this severability analysis. Thomas wrote:

Even assuming the majority correctly characterizes the Fifth Circuit’s opinion, it cites no authority for the proposition that arbitrary and capricious review requires an agency to dissect an unlawful program piece by piece, scrutinizing each separate element to determine whether it would independently violate the law, rather than just to rescind the entire program.

Roberts replies:

State Farm teaches that when an agency rescinds a prior policy its reasoned analysis must consider the “alternative[s]” that are “within the ambit of the existing [policy].” Here forbearance was not simply “within the ambit of the existing [policy],” it was the centerpiece of the policy: DACA, after all, stands for “Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.” But the rescission memorandum contains no discussion of forbearance or the option of retaining forbearance without benefits. Duke “entirely failed to consider [that] important aspect of the problem.”

Thomas replied that State Farm does not apply in this unique context. DHS shifted positions not out of policy preferences, but because a court declared part of the policy unlawful.  He wrote:

The majority has no answer except to suggest that this approach is inconsistent with State Farm. But in doing so, the majority ignores the fact that, unlike the typical “prior policy” contemplated by the Court in State Farm, DACA is unlawful. Neither State Farm nor any other decision cited by the majority addresses what an agency must do when it has inherited an unlawful program. It is perhaps for this reason that, rather than responding with authority of its own, the majority simply opts to excise the “unlawful policy” aspect from its discussion.

Thomas is right. Indeed, DHS may have not grounded the rescission solely on policy grounds because of precedents like State Farm. And policy concerns would not override reliance interests. Roberts has no response to this point. This unique case does not fit the State Farm paradigm.

Thomas drives this point home forcefully:

By requiring more, the majority has distorted the APA review process beyond recognition, further burdening all future attempts to rescind unlawful programs. Plaintiffs frequently bring successful challenges to agency actions by arguing that the agency has impermissibly dressed up a legislative rule as a policy statement and must comply with the relevant procedures before functionally binding regulated parties. But going forward, when a rescinding agency inherits an invalid legislative rule that ignored virtually every rulemaking requirement of the APA, it will be obliged to overlook that reality. Instead of simply terminating the program because it did not go through the requisite process, the agency will be compelled to treat an invalid legislative rule as though it were legitimate

Finally, Thomas also questions whether Dukes could have “severed” the forbearance element from the benefits element. In short, if DHS modified every single regulation that confers benefits on DACA recipients, the agency would run into countless APA challenges. It would never be accomplished. The far easier path is to simply rescind the root cause: the DACA policy, rather than make dozens of piecemeal changes.

The majority’s interpretation of the Fifth Circuit’s opinion is highly questionable. Because a grant of deferred action renders DACA recipients eligible for certain benefits and work authorization, it is far from clear that the Department could separate DACA’s “forbearance component” from the major benefits it conferred without running into yet another APA problem. The majority points to the fact that, under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, relevant regulations exclude those receiving deferred action through DACA from coverage. But that misses the point. Those regulations were promulgated before “anyone with deferred action under the DACA process applie[d]” for those benefits. By contrast, DACA recipients have been eligible for and have received Medicare, Social Security, and work authorization for years. DHS therefore is not writing on a blank slate. Under the majority’s rule, DHS would need to amend all relevant regulations and explain why all recipients of deferred action who have previously received such benefits may no longer receive them. Alternatively and perhaps more problematically, it would need to provide a reason why other recipients of deferred action should continue to qualify, while DACA recipients should not. It thus seems highly likely that the majority’s proposed course of action would be subject to serious arbitrary and capricious challenges.

Roberts certainly knows that trying to modify dozens of regulations would be problematic. He does not seriously expect the administration to take these steps on remand. Nor did he expect the administration to revise the census form last summer. He dangles a meaningless offer of relief–one last chance!–to assuage his perverse sense of minimalism.

Eighth, Roberts also holds that Dukes failed to adequately consider reliance interests. In other words, even if Dukes jumped through hoop the fecund mind of John Roberts can concoct to survive A&C review, the memo was still inadequate. Why? Roberts has more hoops to jump through:

Had Duke considered reliance interests, she might, for example, have considered a broader renewal period based on the need for DACA recipients to reorder their affairs. Alternatively, Duke might have considered more accommodating termination dates for recipients caught in the middle of a time-bounded commitment, to allow them to, say, graduate from their course of study, complete their military service, or finish a medical treatment regimen. Or she might have instructed immigration officials to give salient weight to any reliance interests engendered by DACA when exercising individualized enforcement discretion.

No memorandum can possibly touch all the bases. It is impossible. And now, even if the agency attempts to issue a new memorandum, district courts around the country will use Roberts’s dictum as a checklist. The failure to consider and address these issues renders the rescission unlawful.

This sort of narrow tailoring exceeds strict scrutiny, the kind Roberts would not apply in any other context. Not for Free Speech. Not for substantive due process. Certainly not for the Second Amendment.

***

I sincerely hope this case is a ticket good for one ride on the John Roberts express. This framework, if taken seriously–which I do not–would make it impossible for any agency to modify an old policy that is in effect. There will always be countless ways to address reliance interests. My prediction: the DACA case will soon be treated like the APA analysis in the Census case. Another blip in administrative law that was only needed for the moment.

Of course, there may be an upside. If President Trump loses in November, his administration could rush through a package of questionable executive actions, on which people will quickly rely upon, rendering it impossible for President Biden to rescind them. I’m sure Roberts will find a way to respond in kind.

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Why the DACA Rescission Failed CJ Robert’s APA “Severability” Analysis

Yesterday, I posted my high-level analysis of DHS v. Regents of California, the DACA case. This lengthy post will dive deeper into the weeds. I’ll presume familiarity with the facts of the case, the history of the litigation, and knowledge of basic APA doctrine.

Chief Justice Roberts’s analysis has eight major parts.

First, Roberts held that the DACA rescission is subject to judicial review. This conclusion is significant. In 2016, the Obama administration argued that DAPA itself was not subject to review because DAPA was a general non-enforcement policy. And in 2020, the Trump administration argued that the DACA rescission was not subject to review, because the rescission was also a general non-enforcement policy. (Republican and Democratic agencies agree on little but non-reviewability). But Roberts rejects both positions. He argues that DACA “is not simply a non-enforcement policy.” Why? Critically, the policy confers benefits:

The benefits attendant to deferred action provide further confirmation that DACA is more than simply a non-enforcement policy. As described above, by virtue of receiving deferred action, the 700,000 DACA recipients may request work authorization and are eligible for Social Security and Medicare. Unlike an agency’s refusal to take requested enforcement action, access to these types of benefits is an interest “courts often are called upon to protect.” Chaney. Because the DACA program is more than a non-enforcement policy, its rescission is subject to review under the APA.

Defenders of DACA have long argued that the policy is merely an act of prioritization: certain people are de-prioritized for removal. Chief Justice Roberts has killed that argument. As a result, Texas’s long-pending challenge to DACA has now cleared the reviewability hurdle. That case can proceed to the merits. These holdings were small concessions for the Court’s four liberals to pay for a favorable judgment.

Second, Chief Justice Roberts limited his review to the Duke memorandum, and disregards the Nielsen memorandum. I think this analysis is correct. The Nielsen memo added additional justifications that were not in the agency action. Roberts write:

The policy reasons that Secretary Nielsen cites as a third basis for the rescission are also nowhere to be found in the Duke Memorandum. That document makes no mention of a preference for legislative fixes, the superiority of case-by-case decisionmaking, the importance of sending a message of robust enforcement, or any other policy consideration. Nor are these points included in the legal analysis from the Fifth Circuit and the Attorney General. They can be viewed only as impermissible post hoc rationalizations and thus are not properly before us.

Judge Bates put the administration in a tough bind. They did the best they could.

Third, Roberts finds that the rescission is arbitrary and capricious. But he expressly rejects the approaches of three courts of appeals. These courts held that the Secretary was wrong to rely on the Fifth Circuit’s decision, because the Fifth Circuit was wrong. For example, the Ninth Circuit held that the Fifth Circuit erred in Texas v. U.S. Therefore, the Secretary’s analysis was arbitrary and capricious:

DACA is being implemented in a manner that reflects discretionary, case-by-case review, and at least one of the Fifth Circuit’s key rationales in striking down DAPA is inapplicable with respect to DACA. With respect for our sister circuit, we find the analysis that seemingly compelled the result in Texas entirely inapposite. And because the Acting Secretary was therefore incorrect in her belief that DACA was illegal and had to be rescinded, plaintiffs are likely to succeed in demonstrating that the rescission must be set aside. Chenery I, 318 U.S. at 94.

But Chief Justice Roberts did not adopt this approach. He did not disagree with the Fifth Circuit’s decision. He could have. That holding would have made this case much easier. To the contrary, he recited the Fifth Circuit’s analysis without any criticism whatsoever.

Does this recitation suggest Roberts agrees with Judges Smith and Elrod? Possibly. Roberts explains that Secretary Duke was “bound by the Attorney General’s legal determination” concerning Texas v. U.S. He added, “Whether DACA is illegal is, of course, a legal determination, and therefore a question for the Attorney General.” Even if the Attorney General relied on an erroneous precedent, the DHS Secretary could not have disagreed. But I am inclined to believe that Roberts endorsed the Fifth Circuit’s rationale. I’ll explain why in the next part.

Fourth, Roberts concludes that part of DACA is lawful: specifically, the power to forbear removal. The legal debate only concerned the conferral of benefits, such as work authorization. Roberts doesn’t quite say that conferring benefits is illegal. In his typical fashion, Roberts hedges on all important legal questions. The manner in which he relies on the Fifth Circuit suggests he leans that way. But it is ultimately noncommittal. I don’t think the rest of the Kagan Court would have joined a more express analysis.

Let’s walk through the Court’s discussion of the Smith/Elrod decision. Roberts explains that the “core” of the challenge involved conferring benefits.

But Duke did not appear to appreciate the full scope of her discretion, which picked up where the Attorney General’s legal reasoning left off. The Attorney General concluded that “the DACA policy has the same legal … defects that the courts recognized as to DAPA.” So, to understand those defects, we look to the Fifth Circuit, the highest court to offer a reasoned opinion on the legality of DAPA. That court described the “core” issue before it as the “Secretary’s decision” to grant “eligibility for benefits”—including work authorization, Social Security, and Medicare—to unauthorized aliens on “a class-wide basis.” The Fifth Circuit’s focus on these benefits was central to every stage of its analysis. And the Court ultimately held that DAPA was “manifestly contrary to the INA” precisely because it “would make 4.3 million otherwise removable aliens” eligible for work authorization and public benefits.

Roberts added an important footnote: forbearance from removal is separate from conferring benefits.

 FN5: As the Fifth Circuit noted, DAPA recipients were eligible for Social Security and Medicare benefits because they had been designated “lawfully present.” Lawful presence is a statutory prerequisite for receipt of certain benefits. It is not the same as forbearance nor does it flow inexorably from forbearance. Thus, while deferred action recipients have been designated lawfully present for purposes of Social Security and Medicare eligibility, agencies can also exclude them from this designation, see 45 CFR § 152.2(8) (2019) (specifying that DACA recipients are not considered lawfully present for purposes of coverage under the Affordable Care Act).

Later, Roberts would fault Duke for not expressly excluding DACA recipients from the regulations for purposes of the benefits.

He explains that the essential element of DACA is forbearance from removal.

But there is more to DAPA (and DACA) than such benefits. The defining feature of deferred action is the decision to defer removal (and to notify the affected alien of that decision). And the Fifth Circuit was careful to distinguish that forbearance component from eligibility for benefits. … In other words, the Secretary’s forbearance authority was unimpaired.

Did the Fifth Circuit restrict Dukes’s power to halt deportations? No. And the failure to address that element was an error.

In short, the Attorney General neither addressed the forbearance policy at the heart of DACA nor compelled DHS to abandon that policy. Thus, removing benefits eligibility while continuing forbearance remained squarely within the discretion of Acting Secretary Duke, who was responsible for “[e]stablishing national immigration enforcement policies and priorities.” 6 U. S. C. § 202(5). But Duke’s memo offers no reason for terminating forbearance. She instead treated the Attorney General’s conclusion regarding the illegality of benefits as sufficient to rescind both benefits and forbearance, without explanation….

Roberts’s analysis resembles something of a severability framework. He assumed (and perhaps agreed) that part of DACA was unlawful: the conferral of benefits. But other parts were perfectly permissible: forbearing removal. The Secretary’s decision to halt the entire policy thus botched severability. She used a sledgehammer, rather than a scalpel. Because Dukes’s failed to properly sever the impermissible portion of the DACA memorandum, her entire rescission is arbitrary and capricious.

Think about that remedy for a moment. Perhaps the Court could have used a severability analysis for the rescission memo. That is, hold that DHS has justified the cancellation of benefits, but has not justified the cancellation of forbearance. (I privately speculated about such an outcome–let the Dreamers stay, but they can’t work). Roberts could have vacated part of the rescission memo, but left other parts intact. He didn’t. He vacated the entire memo. And why did Roberts use a sledgehammer instead of a scalpel? Because Dukes used a sledgehammer instead of a scalpel. In other words, Duke’s punishment for failing to sever DACA, was Robert’s decision not to sever the rescission memo. A delicious John Roberts blue plate special.

Sixth, Roberts grounds his severability analysis in the admin law chestnut, State Farm.

There, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) promulgated a requirement that motor vehicles produced after 1982 be equipped with one of two passive restraints: airbags or automatic seatbelts. Four years later, before the requirement went into effect, NHTSA concluded that automatic seatbelts, the restraint of choice for most manufacturers, would not provide effective protection. Based on that premise, NHTSA rescinded the passive restraint requirement in full.

We concluded that the total rescission was arbitrary and capricious. As we explained, NHTSA’s justification supported only “disallow[ing] compliance by means of ” automatic seatbelts. It did “not cast doubt” on the “efficacy of airbag technology” or upon “the need for a passive restraint standard.” Given NHTSA’s prior judgment that “airbags are an effective and cost-beneficial lifesaving technology,” we held that “the mandatory passive restraint rule [could] not be abandoned without any consideration whatsoever of an airbags-only requirement.”

Roberts then applies this framework to the DACA rescission:

While the factual setting is different here, the error is the same. Even if it is illegal for DHS to extend work authorization and other benefits to DACA recipients, that conclusion supported only “disallow[ing]” benefits. It did “not cast doubt” on the legality of forbearance or upon DHS’s original reasons for extending forbearance to childhood arrivals. Thus, given DHS’s earlier judgment that forbearance is “especially justified” for “productive young people” who were brought here as children and “know only this country as home,” the DACA Memorandum could not be rescinded in full “without any consideration whatsoever” of a forbearance-only policy, State Farm.

Dukes’s flaw was rescinding DACA “in full.” What should she have done instead? Roberts offers a proposal in a footnote:

DHS could have addressed the Attorney General’s determination that such benefits were impermissible under the INA by amending 8 CFR § 1.3 to exclude DACA recipients from those benefits without rescinding the DACA Memorandum and the forbearance policy it established. But Duke’s rescission memo shows no cognizance of this possibility.

Dukes’s failed to address this partial-illegality, and the precise remedy Roberts conjured up.

The SG tried to preempt this point in his reply brief. DOJ was obviously worried about this anti-saving construction:

The Government acknowledges that “[d]eferred action coupled with the associated benefits are the two legs upon which the DACA policy stands.” Reply Brief 21. It insists, however, that “DHS was not required to consider whether DACA’s illegality could be addressed by separating” the two. Ibid. According to the Government, “It was not arbitrary and capricious for DHS to view deferred action and its collateral benefits as importantly linked.”

No such luck.

Perhaps. But that response misses the point. The fact that there may be a valid reason not to separate deferred action from benefits does not establish that DHS considered that option or that such consideration was unnecessary.

In short, DHS is to be faulted for not considering a more narrowly tailored way to accomplish their goal. I framed that test quite deliberately. Roberts’s test resembles strict scrutiny. Roberts applied an over-inclusiveness standard to the arbitrary and capricious standard. Indeed, it is even stricter than strict scrutiny: the failure to anticipate the precise remedy that the Chief Justice–and no one else–conjured up has rendered the action unlawful.

Indeed, this approach resembles the mirror image of the rational basis test. With rational basis review, the Court can manufacture reasons to uphold a governmental policy, even if the government did not actually entertain that justification. Roberts flips the script. He manufactures reasons to invalidate a governmental policy, even if no one–not a single judge, litigant, or even academic–considered it. Roberts moved the goal posts. No agency can possibly conceive of every possible way to address a problem.

Seventh, Roberts responds to Justice Thomas, who criticizes this severability analysis. Thomas wrote:

Even assuming the majority correctly characterizes the Fifth Circuit’s opinion, it cites no authority for the proposition that arbitrary and capricious review requires an agency to dissect an unlawful program piece by piece, scrutinizing each separate element to determine whether it would independently violate the law, rather than just to rescind the entire program.

Roberts replies:

State Farm teaches that when an agency rescinds a prior policy its reasoned analysis must consider the “alternative[s]” that are “within the ambit of the existing [policy].” Here forbearance was not simply “within the ambit of the existing [policy],” it was the centerpiece of the policy: DACA, after all, stands for “Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.” But the rescission memorandum contains no discussion of forbearance or the option of retaining forbearance without benefits. Duke “entirely failed to consider [that] important aspect of the problem.”

Thomas replied that State Farm does not apply in this unique context. DHS shifted positions not out of policy preferences, but because a court declared part of the policy unlawful.  He wrote:

The majority has no answer except to suggest that this approach is inconsistent with State Farm. But in doing so, the majority ignores the fact that, unlike the typical “prior policy” contemplated by the Court in State Farm, DACA is unlawful. Neither State Farm nor any other decision cited by the majority addresses what an agency must do when it has inherited an unlawful program. It is perhaps for this reason that, rather than responding with authority of its own, the majority simply opts to excise the “unlawful policy” aspect from its discussion.

Thomas is right. Indeed, DHS may have not grounded the rescission solely on policy grounds because of precedents like State Farm. And policy concerns would not override reliance interests. Roberts has no response to this point. This unique case does not fit the State Farm paradigm.

Thomas drives this point home forcefully:

By requiring more, the majority has distorted the APA review process beyond recognition, further burdening all future attempts to rescind unlawful programs. Plaintiffs frequently bring successful challenges to agency actions by arguing that the agency has impermissibly dressed up a legislative rule as a policy statement and must comply with the relevant procedures before functionally binding regulated parties. But going forward, when a rescinding agency inherits an invalid legislative rule that ignored virtually every rulemaking requirement of the APA, it will be obliged to overlook that reality. Instead of simply terminating the program because it did not go through the requisite process, the agency will be compelled to treat an invalid legislative rule as though it were legitimate

Finally, Thomas also questions whether Dukes could have “severed” the forbearance element from the benefits element. In short, if DHS modified every single regulation that confers benefits on DACA recipients, the agency would run into countless APA challenges. It would never be accomplished. The far easier path is to simply rescind the root cause: the DACA policy, rather than make dozens of piecemeal changes.

The majority’s interpretation of the Fifth Circuit’s opinion is highly questionable. Because a grant of deferred action renders DACA recipients eligible for certain benefits and work authorization, it is far from clear that the Department could separate DACA’s “forbearance component” from the major benefits it conferred without running into yet another APA problem. The majority points to the fact that, under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, relevant regulations exclude those receiving deferred action through DACA from coverage. But that misses the point. Those regulations were promulgated before “anyone with deferred action under the DACA process applie[d]” for those benefits. By contrast, DACA recipients have been eligible for and have received Medicare, Social Security, and work authorization for years. DHS therefore is not writing on a blank slate. Under the majority’s rule, DHS would need to amend all relevant regulations and explain why all recipients of deferred action who have previously received such benefits may no longer receive them. Alternatively and perhaps more problematically, it would need to provide a reason why other recipients of deferred action should continue to qualify, while DACA recipients should not. It thus seems highly likely that the majority’s proposed course of action would be subject to serious arbitrary and capricious challenges.

Roberts certainly knows that trying to modify dozens of regulations would be problematic. He does not seriously expect the administration to take these steps on remand. Nor did he expect the administration to revise the census form last summer. He dangles a meaningless offer of relief–one last chance!–to assuage his perverse sense of minimalism.

Eighth, Roberts also holds that Dukes failed to adequately consider reliance interests. In other words, even if Dukes jumped through hoop the fecund mind of John Roberts can concoct to survive A&C review, the memo was still inadequate. Why? Roberts has more hoops to jump through:

Had Duke considered reliance interests, she might, for example, have considered a broader renewal period based on the need for DACA recipients to reorder their affairs. Alternatively, Duke might have considered more accommodating termination dates for recipients caught in the middle of a time-bounded commitment, to allow them to, say, graduate from their course of study, complete their military service, or finish a medical treatment regimen. Or she might have instructed immigration officials to give salient weight to any reliance interests engendered by DACA when exercising individualized enforcement discretion.

No memorandum can possibly touch all the bases. It is impossible. And now, even if the agency attempts to issue a new memorandum, district courts around the country will use Roberts’s dictum as a checklist. The failure to consider and address these issues renders the rescission unlawful.

This sort of narrow tailoring exceeds strict scrutiny, the kind Roberts would not apply in any other context. Not for Free Speech. Not for substantive due process. Certainly not for the Second Amendment.

***

I sincerely hope this case is a ticket good for one ride on the John Roberts express. This framework, if taken seriously–which I do not–would make it impossible for any agency to modify an old policy that is in effect. There will always be countless ways to address reliance interests. My prediction: the DACA case will soon be treated like the APA analysis in the Census case. Another blip in administrative law that was only need for the moment.

Of course, there may be an upside. If President Trump loses in November, his administration could rush through a package of questionable executive actions, on which people will quickly rely upon, rendering it impossible for President Biden to rescind them. I’m sure Roberts will find a way to respond in kind.

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Juneteenth, America’s Other Independence Day, Is the Holiday We Need Right Now

Juneteenth Flag

Juneteenth, America’s other day of independence, is celebrated by black Americans in commemoration of the day the last of the slaves heard the news of the Emancipation Proclamation. On June 19, 1865, two years after the proclamation, Union General Gordon Granger led 20,000 troops to Galveston, Texas, and read from Order No. 3. Jubilation followed, and the day lives on as a joyful memory of a moment when the nation’s founding ideals were finally applied to black Americans.

Juneteenth is now celebrated with gatherings, cultural events, and historical storytelling in many cities, and there are several efforts to make the holiday mainstream.

Juneteenth embodies the spirit of Frederick Douglass’ “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” speech from 1852:

What, to the American slave, is your 4th of July? I answer; a day that reveals to him, more than all other days in the year, the gross injustice and cruelty to which he is the constant victim. To him, your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciation of tyrants, brass fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanksgivings, with all your religious parade and solemnity, are, to Him, mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety, and hypocrisy—a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a nation of savages. There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the United States, at this very hour.

Douglass’ speech has remained relevant in the 168 years since he spoke the words. And even after the formal end of state-sponsored segregation, the two Americas to which Douglass refers remained on display in many different state institutions.

When my city of Nashville needed an interstate in the 1960s, planners were faced with a few choices: potentially disrupt the all-white suburban neighborhood of Belle Meade, or place I-40 in the predominantly black North Nashville. The planners not only decided on the latter, but chose a route that cut off black businesses, churches, and schools from local residents. This decision, which may have been made in part to slow desegregation, arrested 100 years of prosperity and contributions to the music scene on Jefferson Street.

When the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act established a 100-to-1 sentencing disparity between crack cocaine and powder cocaine (later reduced to an 18-to-1 disparity in 2010 by the Fair Sentencing Act), black defendants made up over 80 percent of convictions for crack cocaine convictions within 10 years, despite only accounting for approximately one-third of crack cocaine users.

When Alabama executed Nathaniel Woods in March, officials painted him as a cop killer despite the fact that he did not fire any of the bullets that took the lives of three Birmingham police officers. The actual killer said Woods was “100 percent innocent” and evidence collected by Woods’ attorneys showed that there was no plot to ambush the officers. By contrast, Thomas Blanton, a white man responsible for the deaths of four little black girls in the bombing of Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church, is up for parole next year. The death penalty has long been unequally applied. Though half of murder victims are white, 80 percent of death sentences involve white victims and black defendants were disproportionately involved in capital punishment cases.

When just last month protesters took to the streets across the country to bring attention to police brutality and racism in policing, Minneapolis police arrested a black Latino CNN reporter on camera while his white colleague, who was in the same area, was free to work. Halfway across the country, Atlanta police officers brutalized a young black couple caught in traffic related to anti-brutality protests while the white passenger in front of them smiled and waved at the camera that captured the attack, initially unaware of the contrasting scene behind her.

As Americans finally have loud, overdue conversations about race and inequality, what better step to take towards reconciliation than to celebrate together on a day when we came one step closer to living up to our own ideals?

 

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Juneteenth, America’s Other Independence Day, Is the Holiday We Need Right Now

Juneteenth Flag

Juneteenth, America’s other day of independence, is celebrated by black Americans in commemoration of the day the last of the slaves heard the news of the Emancipation Proclamation. On June 19, 1865, two years after the proclamation, Union General Gordon Granger led 20,000 troops to Galveston, Texas, and read from Order No. 3. Jubilation followed, and the day lives on as a joyful memory of a moment when the nation’s founding ideals were finally applied to black Americans.

Juneteenth is now celebrated with gatherings, cultural events, and historical storytelling in many cities, and there are several efforts to make the holiday mainstream.

Juneteenth embodies the spirit of Frederick Douglass’ “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” speech from 1852:

What, to the American slave, is your 4th of July? I answer; a day that reveals to him, more than all other days in the year, the gross injustice and cruelty to which he is the constant victim. To him, your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciation of tyrants, brass fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanksgivings, with all your religious parade and solemnity, are, to Him, mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety, and hypocrisy—a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a nation of savages. There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the United States, at this very hour.

Douglass’ speech has remained relevant in the 168 years since he spoke the words. And even after the formal end of state-sponsored segregation, the two Americas to which Douglass refers remained on display in many different state institutions.

When my city of Nashville needed an interstate in the 1960s, planners were faced with a few choices: potentially disrupt the all-white suburban neighborhood of Belle Meade, or place I-40 in the predominantly black North Nashville. The planners not only decided on the latter, but chose a route that cut off black businesses, churches, and schools from local residents. This decision, which may have been made in part to slow desegregation, arrested 100 years of prosperity and contributions to the music scene on Jefferson Street.

When the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act established a 100-to-1 sentencing disparity between crack cocaine and powder cocaine (later reduced to an 18-to-1 disparity in 2010 by the Fair Sentencing Act), black defendants made up over 80 percent of convictions for crack cocaine convictions within 10 years, despite only accounting for approximately one-third of crack cocaine users.

When Alabama executed Nathaniel Woods in March, officials painted him as a cop killer despite the fact that he did not fire any of the bullets that took the lives of three Birmingham police officers. The actual killer said Woods was “100 percent innocent” and evidence collected by Woods’ attorneys showed that there was no plot to ambush the officers. By contrast, Thomas Blanton, a white man responsible for the deaths of four little black girls in the bombing of Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church, is up for parole next year. The death penalty has long been unequally applied. Though half of murder victims are white, 80 percent of death sentences involve white victims and black defendants were disproportionately involved in capital punishment cases.

When just last month protesters took to the streets across the country to bring attention to police brutality and racism in policing, Minneapolis police arrested a black Latino CNN reporter on camera while his white colleague, who was in the same area, was free to work. Halfway across the country, Atlanta police officers brutalized a young black couple caught in traffic related to anti-brutality protests while the white passenger in front of them smiled and waved at the camera that captured the attack, initially unaware of the contrasting scene behind her.

As Americans finally have loud, overdue conversations about race and inequality, what better step to take towards reconciliation than to celebrate together on a day when we came one step closer to living up to our own ideals?

 

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“‘Nooses’ in Oakland Park Were Exercise Aids, Man Says”

The AP reports, following up on earlier stories (CNN, N.Y. Post, Independent [UK]) that reported the nooses were being investigated as hate crimes:

Oakland’s mayor said five ropes found hanging from trees in a city park are nooses and racially-charged symbols of terror but a resident said they are merely exercise equipment that he put up there months ago….

The Police Department provided five photographs of trees, some of which showed knotted ropes and one that appeared to have a piece of plastic pipe attached to a rope, hanging from tree limbs.

Victor Sengbe, who is black, told KGO-TV that the ropes were part of a rigging that he and his friends used as part of a larger swing system. He also shared video of the swing in use.

“Out of the dozen and hundreds and thousands of people that walked by, no one has thought that it looked anywhere close to a noose. Folks have used it for exercise. It was really a fun addition to the park that we tried to create,” Sengbe said.

“It’s unfortunate that a genuine gesture of just wanting to have a good time got misinterpreted into something so heinous,” he told the station….

Police said several community members came forward during their initial investigation to say the ropes were used for exercise and a man came forward to say he put them up several months ago….

I appreciate that the city might not want anything hanging off the trees that’s offputting to some park users (the trees aren’t a public forum opened for public use)—or for that matter that might cause physical injury. But it’s a reminder that things aren’t always as they may seem to some.

Note also that one common argument for why hate crimes (e.g., a racially-motivated assault) should lead to greater punishment is that such a crime “is no ordinary crime because it transcends its immediate victims and strikes fear and terror into entire communities,” in the words of now-Senator Charles Shumer. That suggests that, if there’s an ambiguous incident, it may be better for government officials and the media to resist labeling it a hate crime until some more investigation takes place, since false reports can “strike[] fear and terror” as much as accurate ones can. (I’m certainly not saying there should be any prohibition on such premature labeling, just a preference to avoid prematurely publicly assuming the worst.)

Thanks to Ed Driscoll at InstaPundit for the pointer.

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“‘Nooses’ in Oakland Park Were Exercise Aids, Man Says”

The AP reports, following up on earlier stories (CNN, N.Y. Post, Independent [UK]) that reported the nooses were being investigated as hate crimes:

Oakland’s mayor said five ropes found hanging from trees in a city park are nooses and racially-charged symbols of terror but a resident said they are merely exercise equipment that he put up there months ago….

The Police Department provided five photographs of trees, some of which showed knotted ropes and one that appeared to have a piece of plastic pipe attached to a rope, hanging from tree limbs.

Victor Sengbe, who is black, told KGO-TV that the ropes were part of a rigging that he and his friends used as part of a larger swing system. He also shared video of the swing in use.

“Out of the dozen and hundreds and thousands of people that walked by, no one has thought that it looked anywhere close to a noose. Folks have used it for exercise. It was really a fun addition to the park that we tried to create,” Sengbe said.

“It’s unfortunate that a genuine gesture of just wanting to have a good time got misinterpreted into something so heinous,” he told the station….

Police said several community members came forward during their initial investigation to say the ropes were used for exercise and a man came forward to say he put them up several months ago….

I appreciate that the city might not want anything hanging off the trees that’s offputting to some park users (the trees aren’t a public forum opened for public use)—or for that matter that might cause physical injury. But it’s a reminder that things aren’t always as they may seem to some. Thanks to Ed Driscoll at InstaPundit for the pointer.

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Judge Jim Ho: “For people of faith demoralized by coercive shutdown policies, that raises a question”

Yesterday I flagged a Corona-related decision by Judge Easterbrook. He upheld a lockdown on a house of worship, even as governments allow protestors to mass in the thousands. Today, the Fifth Circuit decided another Corona-related decision from Louisiana. This case became moot, because the relevant order expired. Judge Jim Ho wrote a four page concurrence, highlighting this inconsistency. It begins:

At the outset of the pandemic, public officials declared that the only way to prevent the spread of the virus was for everyone to stay home and away from each other. They ordered citizens to cease all public activities to the maximum possible extent—even the right to assemble to worship or to protest.

But circumstances have changed. In recent weeks, officials have not only tolerated protests—they have encouraged them as necessary and important expressions of outrage over abuses of government power.

For people of faith demoralized by coercive shutdown policies, that raises a question: If officials are now exempting protesters, how can they justify continuing to restrict worshippers? The answer is that they can’t. Government does not have carte blanche, even in a pandemic, to pick and choose which First Amendment rights are “open” and which remain “closed.”

Judge Ho questions how protests are exempt, but not worship services:

If protests are exempt from social distancing requirements, then worship must be too. As the United States recently observed, “California’s political leaders have expressed support for such peaceful protests and, from all appearances, have not required them to adhere to the now operative 100-person limit. . . . [I]t could raise First Amendment concerns if California were to hold other protests . . . to a different standard.” Brief for the United States as Amicus Curiae at 24, Givens v. Newsom, No. 20-15949 (9th Cir. June 10, 2020). The same principle should apply to people of faith. See, e.g., Lukumi, 508 U.S. at 537 (“[Where] individualized exemptions from a general requirement are available, the government may not refuse to extend that system to cases of religious hardship without compelling reason.”) (quotations omitted).

Finally, Judge Ho also heavily criticizes Employment Division v. Smith:

Smith has been derided by “[c]ivil rights leaders and scholars . . . as ‘the Dred Scott of First Amendment law,'” criticized by “[a]t least ten members of the Supreme Court,” and “widely panned as contrary to the Free Exercise Clause and our Founders’ belief in religion as a cornerstone of civil society.” Horvath, 946 F.3d at 794–95 (Ho, J., concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part) (quoting other sources). Smith is troubling because it is of “little solace to the person of faith that a non-believer might be equally inconvenienced.” Id. at 796. “For it is the person of faith whose faith is uniquely burdened—the non-believer, by definition, suffers no such crisis of conscience. This recalls Anatole France’s mordant remark about ‘the majestic quality of the law which prohibits the wealthy as well as the poor from sleeping under the bridges, from begging in the streets, and from stealing bread.'” Id. (quoting ANATOLE FRANCE, THE RED LILY 87 (1910)).

Soon, I expect Judge Easterbrook’s decision to be appealed to the Supreme Court. And Chief Justice will find a way to justify the differential treatment.

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