(AP) 鈥 Fifteen states, including Hawaii, and the District of Columbia sued Wednesday to block President Donald Trump’s plan to end a program protecting young immigrants from deportation 鈥 an act Washington state’s attorney general called part of a “dark time for our country.”
The lawsuit filed in federal court in Brooklyn asks a judge to rule that the president’s action involving the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program is unconstitutional, calling the move “a culmination of President Trump’s oft-stated commitments … to punish and disparage people with Mexican roots.”
Rescinding DACA will also injure state-run colleges and universities, upset workplaces and damage companies and economies that include immigrants covered under the program, the lawsuit says.
“The consequence of the president’s animus-driven decision is that approximately 800,000 persons who have availed themselves of the program will ultimately lose its protections” and be exposed to deportation, the lawsuit says.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions said Tuesday the program will end in six months so Congress can have time to find a legislative solution for so-called “Dreamers,” who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children or came with families who overstayed visas.
Plaintiffs in the lawsuit are New York, Massachusetts, Washington, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and Virginia.
“Hawaii is going to court — again. This time we鈥檙e joining 15 other states to fight for the future of our country鈥檚 Dreamers,” Hawaii Gov. David Ige said in a statement. “600 Dreamers currently go to Hawaii鈥檚 schools, work in our businesses, and deserve certainty and stability.鈥
Hawaii Attorney General Doug Chin said joining the lawsuit was “right thing to do.”
鈥淲ith cruel indifference, the president has taken an action that immediately robs hundreds of Hawaii residents of certainty in their future,” Chin said in a statement. “Many of these people, who have done nothing wrong, have only known Hawaii as their home.”
California, one of the most solid Democratic states, was not part of the lawsuit.
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra plans to file a separate lawsuit because a quarter of DACA recipients are California residents, his spokeswoman Bethany Lesser said.
Becerra’s office has not said when the lawsuit will be filed or whether it will include different legal arguments.
Under the move by Trump, people already enrolled in DACA remain covered until their permits expire. If that happens before March 5, they are eligible to renew them for another two years as long as they apply by Oct. 5. But the program isn’t accepting new applications.
Opponents of the program said they are pleased with the Trump administration’s decision. They called DACA an unconstitutional abuse of executive power.
Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and Attorney General Bob Ferguson, both Democrats, called Trump’s action cruel and outrageous, given that the decision was announced by Sessions rather than the president himself.
A half-dozen beneficiaries of DACA 鈥 young adults from Mexico, Venezuela, Peru and elsewhere, including some now working at law firms or for the state Legislature 鈥 flanked Inslee and Ferguson at a news conference in Seattle announcing the lawsuit.
“It’s outrageous. It’s not right,” an emotional Ferguson said. “As attorney general for the state of Washington, I have a hammer, it’s the law.”
Inslee said, “This is one more of a long train of abuses that this president has attempted to foist on this great nation.”
Civil Beat reporter Rui Kaneya contributed to this report.
See the lawsuit below:
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