(CNN) โ A federal appeals court appeared unlikely to fully reverse a judgeโs ruling that would end the immigration program known as DACA, which protects undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as minors.
However, at a hearing Thursday in New Orleans, judges on the conservative 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals asked questions suggesting openness to letting parts of the program survive.
The hearing is the latest episode in a six-year legal battle over the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which was first put in place in 2012 under the Obama administration.
Texas โ joined by eight other states โ alleges that the program has harmed their states due to the public health care and educational spending that goes to DACA recipients, claiming that those noncitizens would self-exile if the program was ended. More than a half-million immigrants are currently DACA enrollees.
But an attorney for New Jersey, which has intervened to defend the program alongside the Biden administration, argued in court that hundreds of thousands of other people depend on the programโs existence, including the US citizen children of DACA recipients whose livelihoods rely on their parentsโ ability to earn income through the programโs work authorization.
US District Judge Andrew Hanen, a George W. Bush appointee, previously struck down the program nationwide for both current and future recipients, but paused the ruling as it applied to current DACA enrollees while the appeal played out, maintaining the status quo.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican, said in a statement after the hearing that the court โwas receptiveโ to their arguments, adding: โI have fought every step of the way to uphold the Constitution against illegal workarounds and look forward to defeating DACAโin its entiretyโpermanently.โ
The Biden administration argues Texas lacks standing to bring the lawsuit in the first place. During the hearing, 5th Circuit Judge Jerry Smith, who was appointed by President Ronald Reagan, told Justice Department attorney Brian Boynton he wouldnโt get far in his standing arguments.
However, Smith appeared interested in the Justice Departmentโs assertions about so-called severability clause in the final DACA regulation put in place under President Joe Biden. A severability clause says that if a court finds one part of a regulation or law unlawful, it can sever that part but keep the rest of the policy in place.
Smith at one point called the clause โsignificant,โ hinting at a potential ruling that would only strike down benefits like work authorization but keep DACAโs shield from deportation in place for those recipients.
The courtโs other GOP appointee, Judge Edith Brown Clement, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, repeatedly brought up the nationwide scope of the trial judgeโs ruling in her sparse comments during the hearing.
Over the course of the litigation around DACA, the Supreme Court in several other cases has signaled that lower courts should be wary of nationwide injunctions.
This story has been updated with additional details.
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