{"id":13957,"date":"2017-04-12T16:43:33","date_gmt":"2017-04-12T20:43:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/live-immigrationreform.pantheonsite.io\/?p=13957"},"modified":"2018-12-28T12:53:54","modified_gmt":"2018-12-28T17:53:54","slug":"why-president-trump-can-and-should-strip-sanctuary-city-federal-funding","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.immigrationreform.com\/2017\/04\/12\/why-president-trump-can-and-should-strip-sanctuary-city-federal-funding\/","title":{"rendered":"Why President Trump Can and Should Strip Sanctuary City Federal Funding"},"content":{"rendered":"

Since Donald Trump was inaugurated, the mainstream media have reported on every anti-Trump district court holding (no matter how slanted) as if it were a binding pronouncement by the Supreme Court. Hence, the portrayal of temporary injunctions on President Trump\u2019s orders that limit travel from terrorist-harboring nations as an unmitigated victory for the anti-borders lobby. Of course, there\u2019s not usually any discussion of the many reasons<\/a> why higher courts are likely to find a particular presidential action constitutional and let it stand.<\/p>\n

The New York Times Magazine (NYT Magazine) has expanded on this tendency in a piece about Executive Order 13768, which directs the Justice Department to strip federal grant money from jurisdictions that harbor illegal aliens. Despite the fact that no court has yet opined on the constitutionality of this instruction, the NYT Magazine ponderously concludes, \u201cAll told, prospects look bleak for this executive order. Unless the Justice Department succeeds in reinterpreting it out of existence, it\u2019s hard to see how judges \u2014 including the conservatives \u2014 will let it stand. They tend to take things literally.\u201d<\/p>\n

Actually, if one knows anything about constitutional law, the prospects don\u2019t look bleak at all. \u201cObstacle preemption\u201d is an established constitutional doctrine, which holds that states are prohibited, under the Supremacy Clause, from creating obstacles to the achievement of Congress\u2019 objectives. The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) makes it pretty obvious that Congress wished to protect the borders of the United States from unauthorized transit by foreign nationals. Sanctuary policies and non-compliance with immigration detainers are impermissible obstacles to the accomplishment Congress\u2019 goals as set forth in the INA.<\/p>\n

In addition, the president possesses a constitutional authority called the \u201cImpoundment Power.\u201d In essence, the president, as the Chief Executive of the United States, may withhold federal funds if he believes a state would use them in a manner that violates the legislation authorizing their expenditure. The Impoundment Power derives from the constitutional requirement that the president \u201ctake care that the laws are faithfully executed\u201d and was first used by President Thomas Jefferson.<\/p>\n

Although dating to the earliest years of the Republic, this power has been subject only to limited judicial scrutiny. In Train v. City of New York<\/em><\/a>, the Supreme Court recognized the impoundment power as legitimate and held that \u201c[t]he president cannot frustrate the will of Congress by killing a program through impoundment.\u201d However, implied in the Supreme Court\u2019s holding is a presidential responsibility to perpetuate the will of Congress \u2013 which is consistent with the requirements of the \u201cNecessary and Proper\u201d clause of the Constitution<\/a>. Therefore, the President would be justified in withholding the monies for a particular program when dispensing them would fund a state\u2019s effort to frustrate the will of Congress.<\/p>\n

In the case of immigration enforcement, it is highly likely that a reviewing court would find the president well within his rights to withhold immigration enforcement (and general law enforcement funds) from cities, counties and states that are deliberately frustrating the will of Congress with regard to immigration laws. In short, the federal government does not have to subsidize state and local efforts to defy Congress and impede the enforcement of the Immigration and Nationality Act.<\/p>\n

While biased journalism in the New York Times is no longer any surprise, the complete failure to even acknowledge the opposing side of a legal argument is a serious breach of journalistic ethics. Maybe the Times should go back and brush up on its basic newswriting skills before it tries its hand at complex constitutional law arguments that it clearly doesn\u2019t understand.<\/p>\n