Trump gets another big win for immigration agenda in court
I will be the first person to admit that Trump getting some of these immigration wins in court has caught me off guard.
The Supreme Court has come through huge for Trump on several different fronts, and he just got another win.
Only this time, it was the appellate court that handed Trump the win.
3rd Country Deportations
Early on in the administration, Trump had announced that they were going to send illegals to other countries if their native country did not want to take them back.
Even after the Supreme Court ruled that Trump could do this, there was still resistance in the lower courts to the order.
This, of course, was ironic because Democrats were licking their chops at the possibility of Trump disobeying a Supreme Court order and being held in contempt.
When a lower court judge defied the ruling, adviser Stephen Miller stated, "Expect fireworks tomorrow when we hold this judge accountable for refusing to obey the Supreme Court.”
Birthright Citizenship
When Trump fought back for his birthright citizenship order, his team did so brilliantly.
They did not fight back for the order but instead against the nationwide injunction that had been placed by the lower courts.
The Court had been looking to take on this issue for some time, and it ruled that the lower courts were abusing this privilege, and Trump scored another win.
The issue itself still had to be resolved, but this was a monster win for a president who has had more nationwide injunctions placed against him than most presidents see over four years.
One More Win
This week, it was reported that an appellate court had sided with Trump on a major issue, that being the ending of TPS for certain countries.
Trump has been trying to remove these statuses from migrants that Biden allowed in the country, which more or less moved migrants form the illegal column to the legal column.
The court ruled, “We agree with the district court that CASA, Inc. has stated a plausible claim for relief with regard to the alleged ‘preordained’ decision to terminate temporary protected status (TPS) for Afghanistan and Cameroon, and that the balance of the equities and the public interest weigh in favor of CASA, Inc. At this procedural posture, however, there is insufficient evidence to warrant the extraordinary remedy of a postponement of agency action pending appeal.”
Again, a monster win for the administration on what is, by far, the most important issue to voters in the 2024 election.