Thursday, July 05, 2012
Though overshadowed by the shocking Supreme Court decision on health care, the Court’s Arizona immigration decision, issued three days earlier, remains far more significant than is appreciated. It was generally viewed as mixed or ambiguous, because the Justice Department succeeded in striking down three of the law’s provisions. However, regarding the law’s central and most controversial element — requiring officers to inquire into the immigration status of anyone picked up for some other violation — the ruling was definitive, indeed unanimous.
No liberal–conservative divide here. Not a single justice
found merit in the administration’s claim that this “show me your papers”
provision constituted an impermissible preemption of federal authority.
On what grounds unconstitutional? Presumably because
state officials would be asking about the immigration status of all, rather
than adhering to the federal enforcement priorities regarding which illegal
aliens would not be subject to deportation.
For example, under the Obama administration’s newly
promulgated regulations, there’ll be no more deportation of young people
brought here illegally as children (and meeting certain chronological
criteria). Presumably, therefore, the Arizona law is invalid because an officer
might be looking into the status of a young person the feds now classify as
here legally.
Beyond being logically ridiculous — if a state law is
unconstitutional because it’s out of sync with the federal government’s current
priorities, does it become constitutional again when federal policy changes? —
this argument is “an astounding assertion of federal executive power,” wrote
Justice Samuel Alito in a concurrence. The Obama Justice Department is
suggesting that “a state law may be pre-empted, not because it conflicts with a
federal statute or regulation, but because it is inconsistent with a federal
agency’s current enforcement priorities. Those priorities, however, are not
law. They are nothing more than agency policy.”
And there’s the rub: the Obama administration’s inability
to distinguish policy from law. This becomes particularly perverse regarding
immigration when, as Justice Antonin Scalia points out, what the administration
delicately calls its priorities is quite simply a determination not to enforce
the law as passed.
This is what makes so egregious the Obama claim that
Arizona is impermissibly undermining federal law. “To say, as the court does,”
writes Scalia regarding those parts of the law struck down by the majority,
“that Arizona contradicts federal law by enforcing applications of the
Immigration Act that the president declines to enforce boggles the mind.”
Consider this breathtaking cascade: An administration
violates its constitutional duty to execute the law by deliberately refusing to
enforce it. It then characterizes its non-enforcement as simply establishing
priorities. It then tries to strike down a state law on immigration on the
grounds that it contradicts federal law — by actually trying to enforce it!
The logic is circular, oxymoronic, and the very definition
of executive overreach. During the Bush-43 years, we were repeatedly treated to
garment-rending about the imperial presidency, to major hyperventilation about
the “unitary executive.” Yet the current administration’s imperiousness has
earned little comparable attention.
Perhaps because President Obama has been so ineffective.
It’s hard to call someone imperial who’s failed so consistently. Or maybe not.
You can surely be imperial and unsuccessful. Waterloo comes to mind.
Regardless of results, however, Obama’s presumption is
Olympian. He takes America into a war in Libya with U.N. approval, but with
none from Congress. Yet that awful Bush had the constitutional decency to twice
seek and gain congressional approval before he initiated hostilities.
The Department of Health and Human Services issues
Obamacare regulations treading so heavily on the free-exercise rights of
Catholic institutions that Obama’s own allies rebel. The new regulation
concocted to tame the firestorm blithely orders private insurers to provide
free contraceptives to employees of the objecting religious institutions. By
what possible authority does a president order private companies to provide
free services? To say nothing of the 1,200 Obamacare waivers granted with royal
arbitrariness according to the (political) whims of an HHS secretary.
And now immigration. Obama adopts a policy of major
non-enforcement of the immigration law — a variant of the very DREAM Act he
could not get through even a Democratic Congress — and promulgates it
unilaterally, while his Justice Department claims the right to invalidate state
laws that might in some way impinge on that very non-enforcement.
The Republican presidential campaign centers on the
ineffectiveness of this administration: failure at home, passivity abroad. A
fine electoral strategy. But as citizens, we should be grateful. Given the
administration’s extravagant ambitions, incompetence is its saving grace.
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