WASHINGTON: A federal judge on Tuesday dismissed a lawsuit the US Department of Justice filed challenging a New York law that President Donald Trump’s administration said was impeding immigration enforcement.

US District Judge Anne Nardacci in Albany rejected the Justice Department’s arguments that a New York law that restricts the ability of the Democratic-led state’s Department of Motor Vehicles to share vehicle and address information with federal immigration authorities violated the US Constitution.

The ruling was hailed on social media by New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat whose office defended the state’s law against what she said was a “baseless” lawsuit. She, along with Governor Kathy Hochul, was among three state officials named as defendants in the case.

“As I said from the start, our laws protect the rights of all New Yorkers and keep our communities safe,” James said.

The Justice Department declined to comment.

US Attorney General Pam Bondi announced the lawsuit at a press conference in February as part of a legal campaign the Republican president’s administration has waged over laws adopted by so-called “sanctuary jurisdictions” run by Democrats.

The lawsuit took aim at a state law known as the Driver’s License Access and Privacy Act, or the “Green Light Law,” which the state enacted in 2019 and allowed migrants in the United States illegally to obtain driver’s licenses.

The law directed the state’s DMV to accept various foreign documents as proof of identification and age for standard licenses and barred the state agency from inquiring about the immigration status of applicants.

The Justice Department under Trump alleged the law was impeding its ability to address a “crisis of illegal immigration” and argued the law interfered with the enforcement of federal immigration laws in New York.

It argued the federal immigration law preempted the state law and that New York’s law impermissibly regulates the federal government in violation of the US Constitution. The Justice Department asked the judge to block its enforcement.

But Nardacci, who was appointed by Democratic former President Joe Biden, said the administration had failed to plausibly allege the law ran afoul of the Constitution.

She said the administration could point to no federal statute requiring New York to provide DMV information for standard license applicants to federal immigration authorities.

Published in Dawn, December 25th, 2025

Opinion

Editorial

Banking inertia
Updated 13 Jul, 2026

Banking inertia

PRIME Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s latest call to banks to expand lending to SMEs is nothing new. Every government...
Justice imperilled
13 Jul, 2026

Justice imperilled

THE Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and the International Federation for Human Rights have raised concerns about...
Toxic staple
13 Jul, 2026

Toxic staple

A RECENT article published in Dawn has shed light on the challenges being faced by Sindh’s chilli farmers, whose...
Mixed messaging
Updated 12 Jul, 2026

Mixed messaging

In case the parleys fail, a return to full-scale war would be the likely outcome.
Way forward
12 Jul, 2026

Way forward

A GROUP of estranged PTI leaders, calling themselves the ‘National Dialogue Committee’ and led by figures like...
Recalled orders
12 Jul, 2026

Recalled orders

WHILE justice should be blind, it should not be oblivious to the human suffering some decisions may cause. This is...