Supreme Court delays Texas deportation law for a second time

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For the second time, Justice Samuel Alito extended a stay halting the law, known as Senate Bill 4.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday indefinitely delayed a Texas law that would empower state authorities to arrest and deport migrants, an effort by Republican legislators to give the state immigration enforcement powers long left solely to the federal government. The order was released minutes after a 4 p.m. deadline, prompting initial confusion over whether the court decided to let the law stand.

The dispute is still in the early stages, but a federal judge in Austin last month blocked the law, calling it “patently unconstitutional.” PRIMER: Four things to know about SB4 Texas' migrant arrest law Judge David A. Ezra wrote that immigration enforcement is left to the federal government, and the law “conflicts with key provisions of federal immigration law, to the detriment of the United States’ foreign relations and treaty obligations.

 

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