Press Release, Dec. 22, 2014 - Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery today notified the
appropriate parties that the State will join a lawsuit brought by
attorneys general and governors from 24 other states to challenge the
President's recent executive action on immigration.
Slatery said, "Our office has carefully considered whether to join
this lawsuit and concluded that it is in the best interest of the State
to do so. While the subject of the executive action was immigration,
the lawsuit is not about immigration. It is really more about the rule
of law and the limitations that prevent the executive branch from taking
over a role constitutionally reserved for Congress. The executive
directives issued by the White House and Homeland Security conflict with
existing federal law. They replace prosecutorial discretion, normally
determined on a case by case basis, with a unilateral nonenforcement
policy protecting over 4 million people. The directives also are rules
that have been issued without complying with the Administrative
Procedures Act. However frustrating and painstakingly long the federal
legislative process may be, making law is the prerogative of Congress,
not the executive branch. Congress can resolve all of the issues raised
by this lawsuit, and the executive directives for that matter, by
timely enacting legislation. But in the meantime the State cannot sit
on the sidelines of this case, when unlawful directives of this
magnitude grant lawful presence and other rights like work permits to
such a large number. Asking a court to review this issue is the prudent
choice, especially when state resources will be taxed under the
directives to provide benefits like unemployment compensation and health
care."
Tennessee joins Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho,
Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana,
Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
South Dakota, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin, in the
litigation. The States' complaint was filed in the Federal District
Court of Texas and requested a preliminary injunction.
Top Stories
No comments:
Post a Comment