Politics

Supreme Court Weighs Whether States May Defend a Trump Immigration Policy

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court heard arguments on Wednesday in a tangled dispute over whether Republican-led states may step in to defend a Trump-era immigration policy that the Biden administration has abandoned. The policy, a revision of the “public charge” rule, imposed a new wealth test on applicants for green cards.

Some justices questioned the Biden administration’s legal maneuvers, suggesting they were aggressive, unseemly and too clever by half.

“It’s really quite a license for collusive action,” Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said of the administration’s strategy, which included accepting a court ruling against the policy and opposing the states’ attempts to intervene to argue in its favor.

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. gave a sarcastic account of what had happened.

“I congratulate whoever it is in the Justice Department or the executive branch who devised this strategy and was able to implement it with military precision,” he said, adding, “I’m not aware of a precedent where an incoming administration has done anything quite like this.”

Other justices said that it was routine for new presidential administrations to change course and that, in any event, the states were seeking to intervene in the wrong court.

“It’s very much not unprecedented,” Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh said, “for the government to acquiesce in an adverse judgment invalidating a rule. That is not unprecedented at all.”

Justice Elena Kagan questioned the convoluted litigation strategy pursued by the states seeking to revive the Trump administration’s policy. It was a “quadruple bank shot,” she said, one that seemed to include trying to intervene in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in San Francisco, in the hope of undoing a ruling in a federal trial court in Illinois so that the states could file a new suit in federal court in Washington.

Helen H. Hong, a lawyer for Democratic-led states and localities that had challenged the policy in the first place, said there was “nothing the Ninth Circuit can do to restore the rule.”

The policy at issue in the case revised the “public charge” rule, which allows officials to deny permanent legal status, also known as a green card, to immigrants who are likely to need public assistance. In the past, only substantial and sustained monetary help or long-term institutionalization counted, and fewer than 1 percent of applicants were disqualified on public-charge grounds.

The Trump administration’s revised rule broadened the criteria to include “noncash benefits providing for basic needs such as housing or food” used in any 12 months in a 36-month period. Use of two kinds of benefits in a single month counted as two months, and so on.

The policy was challenged in lawsuits around the nation, and several federal judges blocked it. But in January 2020, by a 5-to-4 vote, the Supreme Court revived the policy while appeals moved forward.

After President Biden took office last year, his administration decided not to defend the policy in court. At the administration’s request, the Supreme Court dismissed a separate appeal that had reached the justices, and lower federal courts took similar actions.

Relying on a nationwide ruling against the policy from the federal court in Illinois and without following administrative law procedures, the administration then revoked the policy. (It has since started the process to issue its own version.)

Critics called the administration’s actions legal gamesmanship meant to ensure that there would be no definitive ruling on whether the old policy was lawful.

Mark Brnovich, Arizona’s attorney general, urged the justices to address what he called “an unprecedented legal maneuver,” adding that “the rule saved the states collectively more than a billion dollars per year.”

But Brian H. Fletcher, a lawyer for the federal government, said only a handful of people were turned down for green cards under the policy. “During the year that the 2019 rule was in effect,” he said, “we know that it affected only about five of the approximately 50,000 adjustment-of-status applications to which it was applied, or about one one-hundredth of 1 percent.”

The arguments in the case, Arizona v. City and County of San Francisco, No. 20-1775, followed the Supreme Court’s announcement last week that it would decide whether the Biden administration can end a Trump-era immigration program that forces asylum seekers arriving at the southwestern border to await approval in Mexico.

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