Why the End of Chevron Could Be a Win for Immigrants
“Immigration is an area of the law where the partisan alignments break down over Chevron.”

On Friday, the Supreme Court overturned Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council, a 1984 ruling that gave government agencies broad discretion to interpret "ambiguous" laws. "Critics have long complained that Chevron deference allowed bureaucrats to usurp a judicial function and systematically disadvantaged 'the little guy' in disputes with an overweening administrative state," wrote Reason's Jacob Sullum of the Friday decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless v. Department of Commerce.
The decision will impact the way agencies regulate fields such as environmental and public health policy. Broadly speaking, it's been celebrated on the right and criticized on the left. But "immigration is an area of the law where the partisan alignments break down over Chevron," says Michael Kagan, a law professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and director of the university's Immigration Clinic.
"We normally think of immigrant rights as part of the progressive coalition politically, and that coalition feared Chevron's demise," Kagan continues. "But Chevron was consistently bad for immigrants."
This was on Justice Neil Gorsuch's mind as he wrote his concurrence. Gorsuch described a case he heard as a court of appeals judge in which the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA), the administrative body that applies and interprets immigration laws, "invoked Chevron to overrule a judicial precedent on which many immigrants had relied." The agency then tried "to apply its new interpretation retroactively to punish those immigrants," Gorsuch explained. "Our court ruled that this retrospective application of the BIA's new interpretation of the law violated" one of those immigrants' "due process rights."
"But as a lower court, we could treat only the symptom, not the disease. So Chevron permitted the agency going forward to overrule a judicial decision about the best reading of the law with its own different 'reasonable' one," he continued, "and in that way deny relief to countless future immigrants."
Immigration lawyers and analysts who spoke with Reason about the end of Chevron stressed that it might take years to see the full effects of Friday's decision and cautioned against viewing it as a massive win for immigrants. That said, it represents a significant shift in several areas of immigration policy.
"On balance, I think getting rid of Chevron will be a modest net plus for immigration liberalization," says Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University and a contributor to The Volokh Conspiracy. "I think overruling Chevron could potentially constrain some executive attempts at immigration restriction, especially really sweeping ones, like some of the ones contemplated by [former President Donald] Trump, should he return to power."
But Somin notes there are "strictures" to keep in mind—and adds that Chevron "seemed to be used a bit less in the immigration field than some others."
David J. Bier, director of immigration studies at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, says he's "skeptical" that the ruling "will have a major effect in most immigration areas." On "certain employment-based issues, it could have an effect, though not entirely positive," he explains. Optional Practical Training, a temporary period of employment related to an international student's course of study, "was just upheld on deference grounds," Bier points out.
Still, immigrants in certain legal situations could benefit from the end of Chevron. "In blunt terms, it made it easier for the government to deport people and it made it harder to win asylum for refugees fleeing really awful harm," says Kagan. "Chevron told federal judges to defer to people like [former Attorney General] Jeff Sessions, who was stridently anti-immigrant, or to the Board of Immigration Appeals, which has often leaned toward restrictionist interpretations of the immigration statutes."
One big factor in this conversation is the way U.S. immigration policy is made. "Congress has passed almost no immigration legislation in the past 20 years," says Greg Siskind, an immigration attorney and founding partner of Siskind Susser, but "presidents still have to administer the immigration system even as the legislation becomes more and more out of date." In practice, that means presidents have "gotten more and more creative in interpreting existing statute language to achieve their policy objectives in the absence of Congress playing a role."
Presidents "have issued an assortment of administrative rules and policies to implement those policies," Siskind continues—whether they're pro-immigration policies like former President Barack Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program or President Joe Biden's parole programs, or those implemented by former President Donald Trump "aimed at restricting legal immigration."
"Agencies will still be able to defend interpretations of ambiguous statutes, but they will need to provide a lot more evidence that their interpretation is consistent with the statute and a judge will have a lot more authority to disagree and impose his or her own view of what that statute means," adds Siskind. "So I expect both pro-immigration and anti-immigration plaintiffs to attack a variety of policies and for the courts to play a much bigger role in setting immigration policies for the country."
The Supreme Court's ruling on Chevron deference makes it all the more important for members of Congress to write clearly worded bills moving forward. (Of course, it remains to be seen whether Congress will actually do that.) That seems like an even bigger stretch for immigration bills, which Congress can't manage to pass in the first place.
"Chevron's demise is a win for conservatives, and for immigrants. It's important, and it may take time to understand its full importance," concludes Kagan. "But overall it's probably not the radical game changer that many people hope or fear it will be."
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Reaching much?
Uncle Charles told her to.
That is one of the most silly takes on a ruling to advance illegal immigration I've ever seen.
One way it may affect immigration is that, once he leaves office, Biden cannot be tried for the treasonous action of aiding and abetting an illegal invasion of the country by foreign nationals. So, he has no fear of opening the border gates even wider. Biden should have been at least impeached by the House, if not for the spineless (or more likely colluding) House Republicans.
Spot on.
"We normally think of immigrant rights as part of the progressive coalition politically
The quiet part out loud.
Just don't call sarc and Jeff progressives.
No. Legal immigrants are welcomed by all sides. Illegal immigrant "rights" are part of the progressive coalition.
Laken Reilly is unavailable for comment.
One of too many
Illegal immigrants doing the abortions Americans won't do according to Biden.
The progressive point of view: "We're gonna run the government, and we want it to be without limitations."
[If you disagree you know what you are]
The president who said article two says he can do whatever he wants is a progressive?
Cite?
He is talking about firing political appointees. He knows he is lying but persists.
He can’t help himself.
Foe fucks sake. You e been corrected on this accusation dozens of fucking times.
Article 2 does uphold his ability to fire political appointees you retarded leftist fuck. The topic of that statement regarding firing Comey.
You pull this same retardation on your sqrsly sock.
Poor poor sarc.
I wish I owned the liquor Store in his town.
He probably drinks rubbing alcohol.
Hand sanitizer
Cut with mouthwash and a dash of antifreeze.
Jesus woman. Does Salon not have an immigration position open?
Fiona loves her some immigrunts
I doubt she's ever met any illegal immigrants.
Meeting the “right” one, might change her mind.
The dream life: married to Mr. (Sr.) Right and working shifts in the back of the for truck.
Or murdered and buried in a shallow grave.
Well, if the bitch embarrasses the family she has to go.
I hope she has the opportunity. Maybe the same "new arrival" that Laken Riley got to meet.
It's never too late to learn.
No, Fiona loves illegals.
Filled by an illegal.
You mean Trump can’t use executive orders and alphabet agencies interpreting laws to give local police stop-and-identify powers and total immunity in order to cleanse the blood of the nation of vile, illegal vermin?
Nooooooooooooooooooooooo!
Guess you were worried about nothing
Poor sarc.
"blut und boden", blood and soil, Der TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer will clean shit ALL!!!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_and_soil
Sarc is so retarded he thinks state employees are controlled by the president.
Wonder if any of those agencies allow deputization. Will truly blow what's left of Sarc's mind to learn no new rules are required or that Chevron doesn't apply to EOs.
When everything is an immigration nail, every news event is an open-borders hammer.
They're all going back.
Well, not all.
Most though.
And you can go with them.
https://x.com/_kruptos/status/1808222078971130093?t=SK8268wsYTBEBMqEU46_nw&s=19
Translation: she no longer feels safe on her own community.
This is something that Walter Ong talks about. One of the roles of men in society is to establish boundaries and create space for women to feel safe, especially in their role as mothers.
When you let those boundaries being, I will use her own word, “invaded,” and I am certain that is how she feels, this is a problem. “Diversity” fine as long as your community still feels in tact, a safe, protected space where you can raise a family with your own people.
This is how immigration becomes a “woman’s issue.” This space needs to be re-established.
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Lol . I wonder who she voted for.
Reluctantly?
I suppose these kinds of articles serve a purpose. If people weren't coming here to rebut them, they wouldn't come here at all.
Yeah, I get much more entertainment, and occasional insights, from the comments. And a chance to be snarky.
So, she opens saying the end of Chevron is a boon to immigrants, laughingly quoting retard Jacob Sullum, then proceeds to quote expert opinions that the decision is a wash for illegal aliens. Of course, simply enforcing existing laws as written would solve most of the illegal immigration problem—no need for creative interpretations in the first place.
Enforcing the law as written is an alien concept on the left. That to do so would solve the problem on border as you point out never enters the equation nor does the left ever point out that The President has the authority right now to close the border.
DACA and many of Joe's changes through the administrative state are not ready into the law. Likely many of the programs dems use to mimic an open border go back to being illegal.
Good luck with that Fiona.
https://x.com/prowrstlngstrng/status/1808171234179665933?t=DxTWeiyTWdgQRFk22KPwGg&s=19
Its astounding how for years "economist" told us how mass immigration doesn't suppress wages for the average American, and now that mass deportations are actually on the table they are trying to threaten you with "rising wages will cause more inflation"
Complete scumbags
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Remember that liberal "economics" have nothing to do with measurable quantities and mathematical relationships and logic. Each parameter has only political context, and can be determined by fiat to fit the progressive agenda.
Thus it makes perfect sense to them to say that mass immigration has does not depress wages AND mass deportation increases wages.
Yea, but in this case they align with globalist, neocon, and libertarian economics as well.
Whatever works best for the financial class and hurts the people most.
The TeenReason infotainment editor should give Fiona the coveted immigration spokes model title.
https://x.com/Slatzism/status/1808197388093260065?t=qdjlErPxhvOaN-M5GgxAZQ&s=19
Whenever two shitlib pet issues clash with each other there is always this commentary like "oooh wonder which one will win" as though the shitlib will experience a cognitive dissonance and become confused about which to support first.
But they won’t. the methodology for predicting which will come out on top is actually very simple: it's whatever causes the most social harm.
Lesbians beaten up by homophobic Muslim migrants? Immediate KO, migrants win, doesn't matter that they're "bigots." The lesbians might have had a fighting chance if they were gay men with piss fetishes and three surrogate sons instead, but alas.
Woman raped by illegals or beaten up by Persons of Houselessness? You already know.
This logic works even if the calculation is more complex, such as a hijabi who doesn't want to share a changing room with a transformer.
The transformer will win. Doesn't even matter that hijabi has three shitlib credit points (Muslim, brown, female). The transformer causes more net social harm on the whole.
Criminals, terrorists, and the omnirace swarm will top almost every battle. Doesn't matter if they're domestic abusers, or pedophiles, or racists, or sexists, or homophobes... they cause the most net social harm, so they will win.
The only consistent challenger to every potential opponent is the transformer, and I don't mean a preened and relatively "normal" transformer - I mean a hairy, fetishistic, porn addicted lumberjack in a skirt.
He's like the final boss in the shitlib pet issue matchups. We should all fear what he will eventually be dethroned by.
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The predecessor
https://x.com/ThePublicaNow/status/1808159610471174433
A lesbian couple in Halifax, Canada, was assaulted by a gang of Middle Eastern migrants last week, leaving both women with serious injuries.
In coverage of the assault, Canadian mainstream media has avoided describing the attackers or their origin.
Maybe I haven't been reading closely enough, but I haven't noticed anyone pointing out that Chevron encouraged Congress to pass laws that are vague and leave a lot of room for interpretation. That way they can, in the name of 'constituent services', extort protection money in return for negotiating good deals for the big spenders on their campaigns.