Pax Ahimsa Gethen/Wikimedia Commons

One of the cardinal sins of modern political media involves avoiding the real human consequences of policy and legal decisions while focusing only on their electoral horserace impacts. I typically try to eschew that sort of coverage, leaving it to the Chris Cillizzas and Chuck Todds of the mediaverse. So I apologize in advance for committing precisely that sin here in response to the just-released DACA ruling forcing the administration to re-implement the program within 20 days.

But I do so for a reason: as our own Martin Longman wrote yesterday, there are a number of unquantifiable factors that could impact whether Democrats take one or both chambers of Congress–a matter of significantly more consequence than almost any given policy decision between now and November. Among those factors are the issues likely to arise in the coming months, from a possible economic downturn to trade war consequences to continued own goals on immigration, education, and environmental policy.

Trump’s signature issue of immigration is not going so well for him. The public recoils in revulsion over his cruel and barbaric child separation policy, not just on its own merits but as new horrific stories of abuse trickle out almost daily. Trump’s famous wall is not being built, what little is being done is not being paid for by Mexico, and Trump astonishingly indicated in public he would shut down the government over it. None of that will play well with persuadable voters, nor is it likely to do much to sway his base.

All of this has pushed DACA largely out of the news. But voters haven’t forgotten. DACA remains incredibly popular, with upwards of 80 percent or even 90 percent support depending on the poll. That means support for DACA cuts into even Trump’s most hardcore supporters. This is not a fight Republicans want front and center as November approaches.

But it looks like it’s going to be:

The ruling sets up potentially conflicting DACA orders from federal judges by the end of the month. The decision comes less than a week before a hearing in a related case in Texas. In that case, Texas and other states are suing to have DACA ended entirely, and the judge is expected to side with them based on his prior rulings.