
Minnesota officialsâ proposed eviction moratorium for migrants is legally flawed, law and Immigration experts told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
The Minneapolis and St. Paul city councils passedresolutions in January asking Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to pause evictions in response to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations across the state. If enacted, the policy may violate federal anti-discrimination laws, the Constitutionâs Supremacy Clause that gives federal Immigration law precedence and its Takings Clause that protects landlordsâ rights, analysts told the DCNF.
âIn short, states, counties and cities canât exempt themselves from federal laws that they donât like,â said Matt OâBrien, the Federation for American Immigration Reformâs deputy executive director. âAnd this is all an unlawful, performative, virtue signaling stunt.â
Minneapolis City Councilwoman Robin Wonsley, who wrote her cityâs resolution, did not respond to the DCNFâs request for comment. The offices of Walz and Democratic St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Vang Her, who signed her cityâs proposal, did not respond to inquiries.
Wonsleyâs resolution demands evictions stop âthroughout the duration of Operation Metro Surge or other future deployments of federal Immigration enforcement agents, to protect residents who have been harmed by the federal governmentâs unprecedented attacks.â The two resolutions also claim the moratorium is needed to shield âlegal observers and community members protecting their neighborsâ from law enforcement.
Freezing evictions exclusively for migrants would be illegal, said OâBrien, who was formerly an immigration judge and has held multiple Immigration policy roles in the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
âExempting foreign nationals from eviction on the basis of their citizenship status is impermissible discrimination against U.S. citizens who wouldnât receive a similar reprieve,â he told the DCNF.
âMoreover, the Supremacy Clause dictates that valid federal law takes precedence over state and local laws â and state/local jurisdictions are prohibited from attempting to preempt federal law,â OâBrien said. âSo, this type of legislation is also subject to a Supremacy Clause challenge.â
Walz froze evictions in 2020Â during the COVID-19 pandemic, citing public health concerns. Renters sued Walz over the policy, but a federal court dismissed the lawsuit, saying it did not violate their contractual or constitutional rights.
The Constitutionâs Takings Clause gives landlords the right to seek compensation if the government takes control of private lands for public use, which could apply to landlords in the Immigration scenario, according to Heritage Foundation senior legal fellow Zack Smith.
âThese efforts are misguided on multiple fronts,â Smith told the DCNF. âThe City Councils in both Minneapolis and St. Paul should be encouraging Gov. Walz and other officials to help enforce federal Immigration law. And regardless of the reason an eviction moratorium is passed, it is open to challenge as an unconstitutional taking under the Fifth Amendment (a fact Gov. Walz should know since he was sued for his Covid-era eviction moratorium policies).â
The Department of Justice (DOJ) has already launched a criminal probe into whether Walz and Democratic Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey illegally obstructed Immigration enforcement, multiple outlets reported in January. The DOJ reportedly subpoenaed both leaders.
The DOJ declined to comment on the moratorium proposal.
Minnesota, Minneapolis and St. Paul are also fighting a September DOJ lawsuit against their sanctuary policies that prohibit local cooperation with ICE, which the Trump administration says violates the Supremacy Clause, court records show.
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