Tim Cook asks Supreme Court to protect DACA
Apple CEO Tim Cook urged the Supreme Court to protect the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (DACA) in a filing submitted under his name with the top court on Wednesday.
Cook was joined by Deirdre O’Brien, a senior vice president at Apple, in arguing in the brief that the company’s employees enrolled in DACA deserve protection from deportation.
“Apple has filed numerous briefs before this Court, but this is the first time we lend our own names as well,” they wrote. “We do so here to stress that not only does Apple care as a company, but we care as leaders, colleagues, and human beings. This is an issue we feel to our core.”
“Our interest in this case is simple: We are distressed at the prospect of ripping our DACA colleagues from the fabric of our company,” Cook and O’Brien continued. “This issue is a moral one: Our country made a deal with a highly vulnerable population interested in a bright future, and we should keep that deal.”
Next month, the Supreme Court will hear arguments from both sides as it decides whether to allow the Trump administration’s rollback of the program, which could leave hundreds of thousands of recipients in jeopardy of deportation.
Cook and O’Brien wrote that Apple employs 443 Dreamers and that the company had sought out to hire them after DACA was created, “relying on the commitment our government made to them.” In the brief, they describe the lives and careers of five of those employees.
“We collectively owe it to the Dreamers to hold up our end of the bargain. It is not just a legal requirement,” they wrote. “It is the moral thing to do.”