Supreme Court temporarily blocks controversial Texas border law SB4
The US Supreme Court has issued a temporary halt to a stringent Texas law that authorizes police to arrest individuals suspected of crossing the border from Mexico.
This law, if enacted, would represent one of the most stringent immigration statutes passed by any US state in recent memory and has the potential to disrupt the dynamics between state and federal authorities.
Civil rights organizations and the Biden administration have filed lawsuits seeking to block its implementation.
In response to the federal government’s petition, the highest court in the US has suspended enforcement of the law.
Originally scheduled to take effect on Tuesday, the law, known as SB4, would criminalize border crossings and subject offenders to imprisonment. Furthermore, it would lead to a significant rise in deportation cases.
Under the legislation, local and state police officers would be allowed to make the stops and arrests, except in schools and hospitals, with more limited evidence.
But it faced legal challenges and last week a US federal court ruled the law should be put on hold.
Judge David Ezra ruled that the federal government – rather than individual states – had jurisdiction over immigration matters.
Texas appealed, and an appeals court temporarily suspended Judge Ezra’s order over the weekend while it decided whether to allow the state’s motion to move forward.
But then a further legal development came on Monday, just a day before the law was due to effect when the US Justice Department asked the Supreme Court to intervene.
Justice Samuel Alito decided to temporarily block the law until 13 March – and has said Texas has until the end of next Monday to put its arguments forward.
The law could still come into force, if the Supreme Court sides with Texas.
Immigration is one of the hottest issues of this year’s presidential election, especially in Texas where Governor Greg Abbott says there has been a “tidal wave” of illegal immigration.
More than 6.3 million migrants – a record high – have been detained crossing into the US illegally during President Biden’s time in the White House. Reasons for the spike are complex, however, with some factors pre-dating Mr Biden’s tenure.
Governor Abbott – a Republican who supports Donald Trump – has said the SB4 law is needed to reduce migrant crossings, and that Mr Biden’s administration has not done enough.
But the federal government says SB4 would create chaos by interfering with its own immigration enforcement.
This is not the first time there’s been a clash over immigration rules between Texas and Mr Biden – nor the first time the Supreme Court has intervened.
One such row has been over a roughly 30-mile (46-km) razor fence which Texas officials installed along the US-Mexico border in a larger effort to deter illegal migration.
The Biden administration has opposed it, saying the wire restricts the ability of border agents to process migrants who have already arrived on US soil.
Migrants have been known to bypass the fence, swimming and climbing under it, often getting injured in the process.
After a row in the courts, in January the US Supreme Court sided with the federal government, and ruled that the wire can be removed.