Supreme Court denies administration request to fast track DACA case

DACA recipient Hilario Yanez weighs in on Congress’ inability to get immigration reform passed.

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The Supreme Court on Monday denied a request from the Trump administration to fast track a case involving the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program for illegal immigrants brought to the United States as children.

The justices, without comment, refused the request for expedited review.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION ASKS SUPREME COURT TO FAST-TRACK DACA CASES, IN BID TO BYPASS NINTH CIRCUIT

The Trump administration is appealing a lower court ruling allowing the DACA program for young undocumented immigrants to continue. The administration wants the program to end, but four lower appeals courts had blocked it with nationwide injunctions. The Justice Department last year asked the high court to intervene and take up the issue now on an expedited basis.

The issue could still be taken up when the appeals go through the normal process, and arguments and a ruling could still happen in 2020. The justices on Monday just decided not to fast-track the issue.

Judicial Crisis Network policy director Carrie Severino breaks down the decisions on hot-button issues.

DACA, which was created after President Barack Obama signed an Executive Branch memorandum, gives some illegal immigrants who were brought to the United States as children the opportunity to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred action from deportation and become eligible for a work permit.

The Trump administration last year announced its plan to phase out the program, but federal courts have ruled variously that the phase out could not apply retroactively and that the program should be restarted.

The White House fiercely condemned those court decisions.

The Justice Department had wanted the justices to use their authority to decide the matter without waiting for lower courts to rule. It is rare the high court grants such a so-called fast-track petition before all the lower courts have weighed in on the merits.

Fox News' Alex Pappas contributed to this report.