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States begin giving driver’s licenses to young immigrants

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Tanya Broder, an attorney with the National Immigration Law Center, says allowing immigrants to get licenses is an important part of achieving the goal of fully integrating them into their communities and the economy. “Certainly, in places like Arizona, the ability to drive is essential,” she says.

But Janice Kephart, an attorney with the Center for Immigration Studies, which seeks to curb both legal and illegal immigration, says DACA and states’ reaction to it undermines the Real ID law, which passed in 2005. The states are supposed to comply with the law’s rules for secure licenses by Jan. 15. Kephart argues illegal immigrants need more than just paperwork to get licenses under the law; the immigrants must also be in a federal immigration database identifying them as being in the country legally, she says. States that do not use the extra step, Kephart says, are not obeying Real ID and could expose themselves to fraud.

But, she adds, states may be reluctant to buck the Obama administration on immigration, after the federal government sued Arizona — and largely won — over the state’s 2010 anti-immigration law. “I don’t really blame the states for this at all,” she says. “How could you? They’ve gotten no support from the feds.”

The federal government has not taken sides in the dispute, and so far it has declined to weigh in on whether DACA specifically authorizes states to issue driver’s licenses to immigrants who qualify for the program, or whether Real ID prohibits them from doing so.

The first test of those competing theories could come in a Phoenix courtroom.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer announced, on the day the federal government began accepting applications for the program, that her state would not issue driver’s licenses to the newly authorized workers. The federal document they receive, she said, “does not evidence lawful, authorized status or presence.” Arizona law requires that applicants for a driver’s license must show “proof satisfactory to the department that the applicant’s presence in the United States is authorized under federal law.”

But the American Civil Liberties Union and immigrant groups sued to force Arizona to let the young immigrants get licenses. They argue that Arizona had accepted the same forms of identification to grant licenses for other groups. They say the state is overstepping its bounds by trying to regulate immigration and is illegally treating immigrants who qualify for DACA differently than others in similar situations.

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