{"id":17105,"date":"2018-05-17T09:43:08","date_gmt":"2018-05-17T13:43:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/live-immigrationreform.pantheonsite.io\/?p=17105"},"modified":"2018-12-28T10:27:57","modified_gmt":"2018-12-28T15:27:57","slug":"ag-sessions-allegedly-unprecedented-creation-of-precedent","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.immigrationreform.com\/2018\/05\/17\/ag-sessions-allegedly-unprecedented-creation-of-precedent\/","title":{"rendered":"AG Sessions\u2019 Allegedly Unprecedented Creation of Precedent"},"content":{"rendered":"

The open-borders lobby has made a pastime out of drumming up false hysteria<\/a> every time the Trump administration takes an action aimed at restoring the rule of law to our immigration system. The latest installment in this fiesta of hyperbole is over-the-top criticism<\/a> of Attorney General (AG) Jeff Sessions\u2019 choice to issue precedent decisions overturning Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) opinions in a number of recent immigration cases.<\/p>\n

According to immigration advocates, \u201cJeff Sessions<\/a> is exerting unprecedented control over immigration courts \u2013 by ruling on cases himself.\u201d They deliberately try to portray him as power-hungry xenophobe searching for any opportunity to poke immigrants in the eye.<\/p>\n

Except that, in reality, AG Sessions<\/a> isn\u2019t doing anything improper or even unusual. Generally speaking, federal agency heads retain the authority to review decisions by administrative tribunals that are part of their agency. And the Attorney General\u2019s authority to review cases decided by the BIA is expressly set forth in Section 1003.1(h)(1)<\/a> of Title 8 in the Code of Federal Regulations, which spells out a review process colloquially known as \u201ccertification.\u201d<\/p>\n

Nevertheless, New York area immigration lawyer and blogger Jeffrey S. Chase<\/a>, who should be well aware of 8 C.F.R. \u00a7 1003.1(h)(1) still whines, that the AG is rewriting, \u201cthe decisions of an ostensibly neutral and independent tribunal.\u201d<\/p>\n

But Chase\u2019s characterization of the BIA is wildly inaccurate and describes it as though it were law court in the judicial branch of government. In reality, the BIA is a unit of the executive branch Department of Justice (DOJ). And it is classed as an administrative tribunal.<\/p>\n

The role of an administrative tribunal is to determine whether an executive branch action was taken in a manner consistent with the parent agency\u2019s interpretation of the applicable law. Thus, the BIA is neither neutral, nor independent, in the sense that a judicial court must remain \u201cneutral and detached.\u201d And the AG may review and overturn BIA decisions, in order to maintain consistency in the DOJ\u2019s interpretation of the immigration statutes it enforces.<\/p>\n

This principle is so ingrained in American administrative law that courts actually defer to an agency\u2019s interpretation of an unclear statutory provision, so long as that interpretation is reasonable and consistent with congressional intent. The concept is formally known as \u201cChevron deference<\/a>.\u201d<\/p>\n

So, why is the open-borders contingent foaming at the mouth? Because they can\u2019t stand any<\/em> kind of immigration enforcement, even though average Americans<\/a> believe strongly that our borders should be secure. That leaves the border-haters only one option: Feed the false narrative that President Trump is being both unlawful and un-American when he applies our immigration laws, as written.<\/p>\n

But, as FAIR has pointed<\/a> out before, nothing that the Trump administration is doing when it comes to immigration is new. All of it is based on established legal authorities. Team Trump has simply flipped the script, using those authorities to promote the well-being of the American public, rather than the interests of immigration violators and their shrill advocates.