Supreme Court Rejects 'Extraordinarily Unusual' Case Against Biden's Deportation Policy
Today’s decision “is narrow and simply maintains the longstanding jurisprudential status quo,” wrote Justice Brett Kavanaugh for the majority.

In an 8–1 ruling today, the Supreme Court dismissed a challenge brought by two states against the Biden administration's deportation priorities. The ruling means the Biden administration may now reinstate those enforcement guidelines.
Texas and Louisiana sued the Biden administration over its updated guidance in April 2021, arguing that it violated federal statutes that require certain noncitizens to be detained. A district judge in Texas ruled for the states, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit upheld that ruling. But today, the Supreme Court held that the states lacked standing to sue under Article III of the Constitution. Justice Brett Kavanaugh, writing for the majority, noted that "this Court has long held 'that a citizen lacks standing to contest the policies of the prosecuting authority when he himself is neither prosecuted nor threatened with prosecution.'"
United States v. Texas centered on the executive branch's authority of prosecutorial discretion, or the ability to decide who to detain and deport. "The Executive Branch must prioritize its enforcement efforts" because it "invariably lacks the resources to arrest and prosecute every violator of every law," noted today's opinion. "That reality is not an anomaly—it is a constant."
The Biden administration issued new deportation guidelines in 2021, which prioritized the arrest and removal of noncitizens who are "suspected terrorists or dangerous criminals" and people who "unlawfully entered the country only recently." This was a drastic departure from the Trump administration's deportation policy, which called for enforcement against "all removable aliens."
There are roughly 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the U.S., according to 2019 data from the Migration Policy Institute. Nearly 80 percent of them have been in the country for over five years, and 22 percent have been here for over two decades. Research consistently indicates that undocumented immigrants have lower crime rates than native-born Americans. In this context, it makes little sense for the federal government to focus its resources on across-the-board deportations; it would be extremely costly and largely target long-present, peaceful residents.
The Supreme Court did not rule on whether the executive branch "is complying with the relevant statutes," noted the majority opinion—holding "only that the federal courts are not the proper forum to resolve this dispute." Rather, Congress "possesses an array of tools to analyze and influence those policies," and American voters can "hold elected officials to account for enforcement decisions."
Justice Samuel Alito was the sole dissenter, arguing that the states did indeed have standing to sue and expressing concern about the "sweeping Executive Power endorsed by today's decision." The majority opinion notes that today's decision "is narrow and simply maintains the longstanding jurisprudential status quo," calling the states' lawsuit "extraordinarily unusual."
"If the Court green-lighted this suit, we could anticipate complaints in future years about alleged Executive Branch under-enforcement of any similarly worded laws—whether they be drug laws, gun laws, obstruction of justice laws, or the like," Kavanaugh wrote. "We decline to start the Federal Judiciary down that uncharted path."
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"If the Court green-lighted this suit, we could anticipate complaints in future years about alleged Executive Branch under-enforcement of any similarly worded laws—whether they be drug laws, gun laws, obstruction of justice laws, or the like," Kavanaugh wrote. "We decline to start the Federal Judiciary down that uncharted path."
What about over-enforcement of Federal laws?
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By the logic of the plaintiffs, every pot smoker would be doing hard time in federal prison. The federal prison system would increase in size from 160,000 to 48 million. A factor of 300. Cost would go fro $8 billion to $2.4 trillion. That is roughly half the annual revenue of the federal government. Those who sided with TX and LA support doubling of federal taxes.
No it wouldn't.
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Good point. Another example would be a sheriff department that doesn't prioritize crimes. So, when the Sheriff comes out for a briefing on a recent multiple homicide and he reports that his detectives will start working on the case when they have completed the current backlog of 100 shoplifting cases.
Or like a DA who won’t prosecute violent crime. Unless a victim fights back. In which case the prosecutor will devote maximum resources to convict said victim of the most severe charge possible. And who also engages in political prosecutions of things that aren’t even crimes.
Why talk about how it isn't working in reality, when in theory it works so well?
There are roughly 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the U.S., according to 2019 data from the Migration Policy Institute. Nearly 80 percent of them have been in the country for over five years
Without commenting on the merits of the decision, I don’t believe that. Hey, according to this nearly five year old data, we find that...
Yeah, came here to say that. Fuck 2019 data, there have been an additional 8 million crossings since Joe took office in 2021. Using that data as if it’s relevant is quite possibly intentionally misleading.
Oh, it's Fiona. It's intentional.
That outfit is also a pro illegal immigration activist group.
And at that rate, we can probably expect that claimed 11 million number to have doubled during Joe's tenancy, presuming he doesn't get reelected. God only knows what it would be like with another four years of that clown.
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That number has at least been around since the W. Bush years. it was probably a wildly underestimated number then.
"If the law requires the government to deport every undocumented alien then the law is a ass." - Mr. Bumble, Pickwick Papers
I don't know when laws passed by Congress became pie-in-the-sky wish lists for what Congress critters wished the real world would be like, but it's a very bad trend and they should stop it!
Congress will never fund adequate enforcement. It will never allow the suburban housewives and corporate CEOs to go to prison.
How about lefty shits like you?
To be fair, it’s impossible for law enforcement to ever be 100% effective in catching criminals. The best we can hope for, I believe, is that they will catch the most violent criminals who actually initiate harm against innocent people. We can facilitate that goal by eliminating all the other victimless crimes that might distract them; and limiting police activities to serving search and arrest warrants based on actual probable cause instead of patrol nonsense and hassling “high crime” neighborhoods in the war on drugs and the war on poverty.
How would that fulfill the politicians' goals of politicizing and weaponizing the DoJ for their own gains?
Perhaps the problem of an executive branch having to prioritize which laws to enforce and which laws not to enforce, can be alleviated by... not having so many laws in the first place?
I know, crazy thinking
Remember how much you cried about Trump enforcing immigration laws?
Like the one time you said you were against the welfare state but want unlimited immigration into one. Amazing dishonesty.
Kavanaugh and the other justices are full of shit. This policy is a face to not deport people. That's why deportation numbers are down. Not steady. They completely ignore the take care clause of the constitution here.
Basically the ruling says as long as a policy can present a face of not doing the governments job, states can't sue.
FTA: "[T]his Court has long held 'that a citizen lacks standing to contest the policies of the prosecuting authority when he himself is neither prosecuted nor threatened with prosecution.'"
Hey, Brett. A state is not a citizen, so your quote standing is utterly irrelevant.
The response is to come up with some citizens who are actually harmed by the policy. Perhaps the people whose properties are vandalized and trespassed by the incoming invasion would have standing.
The Biden administration issued new deportation guidelines in 2021, which prioritized the arrest and removal of noncitizens who are "suspected terrorists or dangerous criminals" and people who "unlawfully entered the country only recently." This was a drastic departure from the Trump administration's deportation policy, which called for enforcement against "all removable aliens."
It must be so frustrating for you Koch-funded libertarians. 🙁
You got the Biden Presidency you wanted. Biden is doing the main thing you hoped for: demonstrating unwillingness or inability to enforce a national border. And yet your sugar daddy still doesn't have enough cheap imported labor; he's down almost $6 billion in 2023. While the rest of the richest Americans are thriving.
Is it the Ukraine thing? The cheap Mexicans aren't enough, and Mr. Koch also needs to import Ukrainians to work for poverty wages? Maybe Fiona can get a column out of that.
#HowLongMustCharlesKochSuffer
"Biden is doing the main thing you hoped for: demonstrating unwillingness or inability to enforce a national border."
https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats/cbp-enforcement-statistics
Please demonstrate from these statistics how Biden is demonstrating either an unwillingness or inability to enforce a national border.
Both teams are terrible on immigration. The only difference is, Team Red enforces border laws with a snarl but Team Blue enforces border laws with a smile.
"suspected terrorists or dangerous criminals"
The Republicans, as usual, are hypocrites. They complain that Biden is allowing terrorist wannabes and criminals to be in the country illegally and then they sue to prevent him from mobilizing resources to address the very problem they are weaponizing against him.
What are you clowns trying to pull?
U.S. Border Patrol Total Encounters
FY17 - 310,531
FY18 - 404,142
FY19 - 859,501
FY20 - 405,036
FY21 - 1,662,167
FY22 - 2,214,652
FY23 YTD - 1,423,282
Charlie is a lying democrat shill piece of shit.
"The Republicans, as usual, are hypocrites..."
Steaming piles of lefty shit, as usual, are liars.
The only difference is, Team Red enforces border laws
with a snarlbut Team Blue enforces border laws with asmilesmirk as they pass out directions to get free stuff at taxpayers' expense.FIFY
States should automatically have standing to sue. That's what the Supreme Court was created for.
States should send SCOTUS the tab.
++
Or pack the folks in a bus and deliver them to the steps of the SCOTUS.
A few buses of illegals to the street in front of each Justice's home would do the trick.
Why should states have anymore right to standing than anyone else. Standing is not difficult to understand. It is also important to avoid taking time for lawsuits that have no court remedy. I would suggest that the states involved get better lawyer that can address standing, but that would not help here because there is no court remedy. The fact is that there are limit resources to address illegal aliens and some priorities must be established. Putting criminals and terrorist at the top of the list seem the most logical.
It is not just the criminals and terrorists that are the problem, it is the sheer number of illegals who overwhelm the border communities' ability to deal with them. Many commit minor offenses simply because they need food and shelter. It would be better if they stayed in Mexico, just like Trump brilliantly arranged.
The problem remains, where do you put the limited resources that you have available. The Trump administration was most effective in holding down immigrant during the COVID crisis. That is because fewer people were trying to get into the country.
Well they shouldn't, and everybody has standing to side.
Yes, standing is not difficult to understand: it's how courts get out of doing their job.
YUP! In fact any citizen should have standing to sue. That's why we have courts.
But they hate doing their jobs, so they make up things like "mootness" and "standing" to stop citizens and help the government.
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At least SCOTUS and Biden have. a partnership to not support the taxpayers who pay for this crap.
Good! It shouldn't be up to the federal executive branch to nullify laws passed by Congress, in particular when such nullification causes obvious harm.
The ruling is also bogus because states do seem to have standing to challenge enforcement of federal laws they don't like
I'd be willing to bet that if we removed a certain segment of the population from criminal statistics, then undocumented immigrants would not have a lower rate of crime than the native born population.
Are you suggesting we should adjust the statistics for various inherent features of the population?
How dare you!
"The Executive Branch must prioritize its enforcement efforts" because it "invariably lacks the resources to arrest and prosecute every violator of every law," noted today's opinion. "That reality is not an anomaly—it is a constant."
Funny how their Nazi-Empire never seems to "lack the resources".
Holy cow that was one of the worst BS explanation I've ever read.