The Daily - A Small Act of Rebellion
Episode Date: November 12, 2019Today, the Supreme Court begins hearing arguments about whether the Trump administration acted legally when it tried to end Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. The Obama-era program known as DACA ...shields immigrants who were brought to the United States as children, known as Dreamers, from deportation.In this episode, we explore why the outcome of the case may turn on a small act of rebellion by one of President Trump’s former cabinet members. Guest: Julie Hirschfeld Davis, the congressional editor of The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: Elaine C. Duke, a former Acting Secretary of Homeland Security, refused to echo the White House’s policy justifications for ending DACA. Her decision led to a Supreme Court case addressing presidential power over immigration.Meet two of the nearly 700,000 Dreamers whose families, homes and jobs may be affected by the justices’ ruling.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, the Supreme Court begins hearing arguments
about whether the Trump administration acted legally
when it tried to shut down DACA.
Julie Davis on why the outcome of the case
may turn on a small act of rebellion by one of the president's own aides.
It's Tuesday, November 12th.
Julie Davis, how exactly did DACA become the subject of a Supreme Court case?
Well, since President Trump was a candidate...
I will immediately terminate
President Obama's illegal executive order on immigration.
Immediately.
He campaigned basically saying that DACA,
which was this program that Barack Obama created in 2012
for undocumented people who had been brought to the United States as children, was illegal.
He defied federal law and the Constitution to give amnesty to approximately 5 million illegal immigrants.
5 million.
He was going to get rid of it, which of course would mean that they would be
vulnerable to deportation.
That's over. That's over, folks.
That's over.
So he came into office saying he was going to do this,
but actually very quickly started talking
very differently about the program.
I want to ask about undocumented immigrants who are here in this country.
Right now, they're protected as so-called dreamers.
Should they be worried?
They shouldn't be very worried.
They are here illegally.
They shouldn't be very worried.
I do have a big heart.
We're going to take care of everybody.
And so he was already kind of making noises,
like maybe he didn't mean what he said on the campaign trail.
DACA is a very, very difficult subject for me.
I will tell you. To me, it's one of the most difficult subjects I have. And then he said on the campaign trail. DACA is a very, very difficult subject for me, I will tell you.
To me, it's one of the most difficult subjects I have.
And then he kept on talking that way.
Well, I have a great heart for the folks we're talking about, a great love for them.
You have some absolutely incredible kids, I would say mostly. And kind of alarmed some of his more hardline advisors like Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller and Jeff Sessions,
then the attorney general, that he had not meant what he had said about being tough on immigration,
had not meant what he had said about being tougher on enforcement than his predecessors.
It's a very, very tough subject. We are going to deal with DACA with heart.
So President Trump's more hardline advisors, the people who want to end DACA and end it for good, are very concerned that he's been waffling about it publicly.
They're concerned that he's going to walk back from even wanting to terminate the program at all.
So they set a meeting in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.
It's late summer, August 2017.
They're going to end the program.
They just have to figure out how.
And into that room walks someone who is
not at all on the same page, the acting secretary of Homeland Security, Elaine Duke.
And who is Elaine Duke beyond that title? I don't feel like I really remember her name.
So Elaine Duke is a procurement specialist at the Department of Homeland Security who,
when John Kelly is picked to be the White House Chief of Staff,
all of a sudden, unexpectedly, becomes the acting secretary.
She's not a political person.
She is not a Trump loyalist.
She certainly does not share the same worldview on immigration matters as Stephen Miller and Jeff Sessions
and the rest of the people around that table.
And in fact, she has a pretty positive
view of immigrants and immigration in her free time. She sometimes volunteers at an immigrant
aid group that's affiliated with the Catholic Church. I mean, she is just not necessarily on
board with this whole push. But as it turns out, she is critically important to the discussion
that's happening in this room because as acting Secretary of Homeland Security, it's her department in the end that carries out the program.
And it is she who will have to be the one to sign the memo if they're going to end it.
So what does Elaine Duke think that this meeting is about? What does she think is
going to get accomplished here? She basically thinks this is a meeting to discuss policy
options with regard to DACA.
And as soon as she gets into the room and sits down and the meeting starts,
she very quickly realizes that this is not that at all.
She realizes that what this is is basically a procedural ambush,
and she is the one being ambushed.
Meaning these immigration hardliners have made up their minds, and they are looking at her and saying, get on board.
Right. And to Elaine Duke, she feels under siege because they're essentially saying, we're going to end this program, and you're going to be the one to issue the memo killing it.
And she feels as if she's been offered a choice that she can't make, and she's not prepared to make, and she basically tells
them that. She says, you know, this is my area. I'm the acting secretary, and you're not going
to tell me what to do. So what happens? What happens afterward is that she is under immense
pressure, not only from people at the White House, but also from people inside her own department
who are allies of Stephen Miller.
She's being told that this is an illegal program,
that it's completely unconstitutional,
and that this administration will never defend it.
She wants to follow the law, and so she says,
fine, I will do it.
I'm ending the program.
But ordinarily, in a case like this,
you'd have the secretary of the department
that was ending the program
lay out an extensive memo for all the policy reasons why they were ending this program.
This memo was much more bare bones.
It essentially just laid out Jeff Sessions' declaration that DACA was illegal and unconstitutional. Such an open-ended circumvention of immigration laws was an unconstitutional exercise of authority
by the executive branch.
And said, in light of that, we're ending the program.
So she leans entirely on a little bit of language from the Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, saying that this is illegal.
That's it.
That's right.
Why is this language important?
It's important because of what it doesn't say.
it turns out that the way that Elaine Duke wrote this memo was kind of a ticking time bomb that has brought us all the way to this issue of DACA being before the Supreme Court today.
We'll be right back. Julie, what exactly did you mean that the wording in Elaine Duke's memo became a kind of ticking time bomb?
Why is that?
It's important because of what happens next.
Good morning.
next. Good morning. I'm here today to announce that the program known as DACA that was effectuated under the Obama administration is being rescinded. Jeff Sessions goes out at the Justice Department
and announces that the program is ending. And immediately, two things happen.
There are huge protests all over the country.
People demonstrating against ending DACA.
And we're sitting here, all DACA recipients, to show Trump that we're not going to be afraid of him.
And we're going to continue to fight, not just for DREAMers, but for our families.
Very quickly.
Fifteen states and the District of Columbia sued the U.S. government today to block.
NAACP has become the latest organization to sue Donald Trump over his choice to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.
Amazon, Microsoft, and Starbucks are getting into the fight to save DACA.
Yet another lawsuit has been filed against the Trump administration today aimed at saving DACA, calling the president's move unconstitutional.
As these suits wind their ways through the court, it becomes apparent pretty quickly that the way in which the Trump administration chose to do this, the bare bones memo that Elaine Duke issued, becomes a legal vulnerability.
that Elaine Duke issued becomes a legal vulnerability.
By declining to cite any policy reasons for ending the program, they essentially have a much weaker argument to put before the courts than they would otherwise. What they're essentially
doing is saying, our rationale for ending this program is that it's illegal and
unconstitutional, which means that if a judge or if a series of judges disagrees with that assessment,
you're done and you've lost. And in fact, that is what starts to happen.
So providing a policy rationale for ending DACA is a stronger legal case than just saying, we don't think DACA is legal. It's kind of a backup
in case that argument falls apart. And that's exactly what Elaine Duke would not provide in
her letter. That's right. If she had been willing to say at the time, as Jeff Sessions and Stephen
Miller and others were, that DACA is the wrong policy because it promotes
illegal immigration, because it makes our country less safe, because it is a perverse incentive for
people to try to get into the country without authorization. If she had said any of those
things, then that would have given the judges in these cases something to latch onto as a rationale, a defensible reason for having
ended this program. But she didn't do that because she wasn't willing to sign on to any of that. And
so what they were left with was the simple assertion that this program is not constitutional.
This seems like a highly solvable problem for the administration, right?
I mean, why not, as they keep losing these court cases,
kind of fill in the rationale afterward?
Like, basically go into their homework and say,
oh, I left off that last thing, and now I'm going to add it.
Well, actually, that's exactly what the Trump administration does.
In the spring of 2018,
this is after Elaine Duke has left
the administration, they have a new Homeland Security Secretary, Kirstjen Nielsen, who has
been confirmed. She submits a supplemental memo that lays out some of the policy reasons that
Elaine Duke had not been willing to and says that failing to end it would send the wrong message
about clear and consistent enforcement of immigration laws.
And does that supplemental letter work?
Not really.
The judge in the case basically says that it has some logical flaws and overall it's just too little too late. You can't go back and kind of reverse engineer a reason for having made a policy decision.
But what it really is is an effort by the president and his advisors
to send a political message. He wants to do what he promised. And so the effort is to kind of
follow through with that pledge, no matter what the consequences. He can still show people that
he's fighting to do what he said he would do. He's being stymied by the courts. He's being
battled by the Democrats,
whatever it might be.
But he's trying to deliver on his promise.
Right, so he's able to publicly keep his promise
even if the way he tries to keep the promise
means that the thing itself never actually happens.
Right, so for instance, while this is all going on,
DACA never really ends.
As these court cases continue to win their way through the process, the program keeps getting extended and extended and extended.
So you have this program that's frozen in time, that is not accepting any new people, but it's also not ending.
So, Julie, when the Supreme Court hears arguments on DACA today, what is the court deciding?
And how does it relate to the story that you have told us about Elaine Duke and the memo that she wrote?
What the Supreme Court is going to rule on is whether or not President Trump had the power to do what he did, to terminate DACA, and to do it in the way that he did it. And that is where
Elaine Duke's memo comes in. Because in order to argue to the court that they were on legitimate,
solid footing for ending the program, the courts have said, at least thus far, that essentially
you have to point to policy reasons why this is a legitimate use of presidential power. And if you can't point
to those, then you haven't met the burden for a legitimate termination of the program.
I wonder if you think that Elaine Duke knew what she was doing back in the summer of 2017
when she refused to use the language of the hardline immigration folks around her in that room and instead inserted
a kind of poison pill, what you call the ticking time bomb, into this memo and into the Trump
administration's entire approach to DACA? That's a great question. I don't really think so. I think
that Elaine Duke at the time understood that this program was going to end. She understood her
role in the process. She just didn't feel like she could see her way clear to putting her name
on a memo that had a bunch of policy arguments that she didn't buy into and that she didn't see
as legitimate. I don't think she expected that all these years later, her memo could be the reason that this program actually might survive.
It's hard not to see the parallels between what Elaine Duke did or didn't do with what we are seeing happen now in the impeachment process.
Career government officials who are told to carry out an order from the president and who are deeply reluctant to do so.
And the way that they handle that
ends up having very significant implications and outcomes down the line.
Yeah, and it's fascinating to see the different ways
in which officials respond to these directives, right?
You have some people saying,
let's try to go along with it as much as we can,
except when it is illegal, except when it seems really inappropriate.
Let's maybe bury this transcript in a server so that people won't get wind of what seems really wrong to us.
But they're all sort of figuring out different ways to maneuver around what they think is the wrong course of action.
maneuver around what they think is the wrong course of action. What we see with the Ukraine matter is they essentially were able to steer around the entire team of foreign policy people
and diplomats who were supposed to be handling foreign policy toward Ukraine. And the difference
here is that they really needed Elaine Duke as the acting secretary to sign this memo. If she
hadn't signed it, they couldn't end the
program. So the outcome was very different there, but I think the dynamic was very similar.
You're saying in this case, there was no steering around the career government official. There was
no circumventing Elaine Duke. Right. When you're trying to end a giant program that is operated by
a big federal agency, there's really no way to cut the secretary out of that process.
Whereas when you're making a decision about a foreign aid package to a tiny country, it turns out there are lots of different ways to maneuver around the people who are supposed to have input into that decision.
This makes me think about all the times that President Trump says that he needs his people in the right jobs all across the administration. And when he complains about holdovers from
previous administrations and says that these people, they get in the way, they muck things up,
they don't carry out his vision, he's kind of right. Yeah, he kind of is right. Because when
people in these positions are not personally loyal to him, personally beholden to the president, and when they don't fundamentally share his view of policy matters, you can get outcomes like this.
So, Julie, turning back to the Supreme Court and to the justices who will hear this case today, what do we expect will happen?
and to the justices who will hear this case today,
what do we expect will happen?
Well, it seems from everything we know,
the Supreme Court, which now has a conservative majority,
will rule five to four in favor of the Trump administration and say that the president has wide latitude
to make these decisions,
that he was within his rights to end DACA,
and that it was done appropriately.
But if that's not the decision,
if it goes the other way, it will have a lot to do with the fact that Elaine Duke
refused to do exactly what the administration wanted her to do.
Julie, thank you very much.
Thank you, Michael.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, Michael.
Oral arguments in the DACA case begin this morning at 10 a.m.
If the court rules against the Trump administration,
DACA is expected to remain intact,
protecting hundreds of thousands of DREAMers from deportation.
If the court rules for the administration,
the White House could shut down DACA,
stripping DREAMers of their legal protections and leaving them vulnerable to deportation.
Much of the reporting for this episode
was done for a book by Julie Davis and Mike Scheer,
Border Wars, Inside Trump's Assault on Immigration.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
All four leaders of Bolivia's government,
the president, the vice president, the head of the Senate,
and the leader of the Chamber of Deputies,
have resigned amid widespread protests demanding their removal.
The resignations followed a decision by the country's longtime president, Evo Morales, to bend the country's laws to stand for a fourth term,
and to insist he had won that fourth term, despite widespread reports of election fraud.
As of Monday, Bolivia, South America's poorest country, had no leader,
and protesters had broken into the president's home and ransacked it.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.