Is This Why There's Little to No Video Footage of the Brown University...
House Votes Down Measure That Would Have Stopped Trump's Military Actions Against Venezuel...
This Black Man Who Befriended KKK Members Might Just Have the Answer America...
Soros-Backed Fairfax DA Repeatedly Dropped Charges Against an Illegal Immigrant — Now Some...
Democrats Find Republican Opposition to Harming Kids 'Creepy'
Target Worker Harassed Over Charlie Kirk Shirt Responds With Grace
Democrats Dump on Trump's Warrior Dividend Payments
It Seems Biden's FBI Hid Stats Showing Armed Civilians Stopped Criminal Shooters
From the Kia Boys to Kia Lawsuits: How Democrats Got Crime Backward
Did Australia Just Thwart Another Islamic Terror Attack?
A New Poll Shows AOC Beating Vance in 2028. There's Just One Problem
Trump’s Numbers Tell the Truth—The Media Still Won’t
Indicted Minnesota Fraudsters Are Still Cashing in on Taxpayer Funds
Progressive Mayor Confronts ICE Commander As Protesters Swarm Federal Agents
Not Even Trump’s Critics Can Deny This Morning’s Good Economic News
Tipsheet

Supreme Court to Hear 'Remain in Mexico' Case

AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib

On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court announced it was taking up the "Remain in Mexico" case, after the Biden administration has appealed. The policy from the Trump administration requires those seeking asylum who come to the United States via the southern border to wait in Mexico for a hearing in the U.S. immigration court.

Advertisement

Upon taking office in January 2021, President Joe Biden quickly got to work getting rid of the policy, but a ruling last August from U.S. District Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk in Texas upheld the policy. 

The Biden administration's version of the policy was implemented last December, as Julio highlighted from on the ground in Yuma, Arizona. 

The U.S. Supreme Court had also previously upheld "Remain in Mexico," last August after Judge Kacsmaryk's decision, but such an emergency docket decision was unsigned. This use of the shadow docket tactic has been particularly reviled by liberals. 

While SCOTUSblog and liberal news outlets such as CNN bemoan the policy as "controversial," Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, both Republicans, were quick to celebrate. 

Advertisement

Related:

MISSOURI TEXAS

The Court will hear the case in April. Curt Levey, a constitutional law attorney and the president of the Committee for Justice took particular notice of the timing. "The Court clearly thought an expedited decision was warranted here because they squeezed a hearing into this term. The other way to expedite it would have been skipping oral argument and deciding the case on the shadow docket. Many on the left are disturbed by the Court's recent use of the shadow docket, but in most cases, it doesn't affect the substance of the ultimate outcome," Levey said.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement