FIRE Says the Law Trump Is Using To Deport Mahmoud Khalil Is Unconstitutional. Trump's Sister Agreed.
As a federal judge, Maryanne Trump Barry said the provision is unconstitutionally vague. That's especially problematic when it is used to punish speech.

For weeks, President Donald Trump and other federal officials have made it clear that they want to deport Mahmoud Khalil, a legal permanent resident of the United States, because they do not like what he had to say as an organizer of anti-Israel protests at Columbia University. Last week, the government began citing an additional justification, saying Khalil, who is married to a U.S. citizen, was not completely forthcoming about his employment history when he applied for a green card last March.
Those belated allegations, the government's lawyers say, provide an "independent basis" for deporting Khalil. "The new deportation grounds are patently weak and pretextual," one of Khalil's lawyers, Ramzi Kassem, told The New York Times, which notes that "the Trump administration appears to be using the new allegations in part to sidestep the First Amendment issues raised by Mr. Khalil's case." As a brief from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) shows, those issues pose a real problem for Trump's plan to expel legal residents he perceives as "terrorist sympathizers."
Immigration agents arrested Khalil in New York City on March 8 and briefly held him in New Jersey before taking him to a detention center in Louisiana. Last week, Jesse Furman, a federal judge in Manhattan, transferred the case, Khalil v. Joyce, to New Jersey because that is where Khalil was when his lawyers first challenged his detention. FIRE, joined by several other civil liberties groups, including the Rutherford Institute and the First Amendment Lawyers Association, therefore filed its brief in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.
The Trump administration does not claim Khalil has committed any crimes that would make him deportable. Rather, the government says he is "subject to removal" under 8 USC 1227(a)(4)(C)(i), which authorizes the deportation of "an alien whose presence or activities in the United States the Secretary of State has reasonable ground to believe would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States." FIRE says that "Foreign Policy Deportation Provision" (FPDP), which Congress approved in 1952 as part of the Immigration and Nationality Act, is unconstitutional, and so is its application to Khalil or other legal residents whose views offend the government.
"The only court to address the FPDP's constitutionality (so far as we can find) held it unconstitutionally vague," FIRE says, citing Massieu v. Reno, a 1996 decision by a federal judge in New Jersey. "The range of circumstances that could warrant deportation" under the FPDP "is virtually boundless," the judge said. The law grants the secretary of state "unrestrained power," she noted, "authoriz[ing] a heretofore unknown scope of executive enforcement power vis-a-vis the individual with utterly no standards provided to the Secretary of State or to the legal aliens subject to its provisions."
The FPDP "provides absolutely no notice to aliens as to what is required of them," the judge added. "The statute represents a breathtaking departure both from well established legislative precedent which commands deportation based on adjudications of defined impermissible conduct by the alien in the United States, and from well established precedent with respect to extradition which commands extradition based on adjudications of probable cause to believe that the alien has engaged in defined impermissible conduct elsewhere."
Although FIRE does not mention it, the author of that opinion was President Trump's sister, Maryanne Trump Barry, who later served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit. "I will never forget the many times people would come up to me and say, 'Your sister was the smartest person on the Court,'" Trump wrote on Truth Social after Barry died in 2023. "I was always honored by that, but understood exactly what they meant—They were right! She was a great Judge, and a great sister."
Barry, according to Trump, was by no means a "Radical Left Lunatic"—one of those "Crooked Judges" who are always trying to obstruct his agenda for political reasons. She nevertheless thought the statute on which he is relying to deport Khalil was unconstitutional. Although the 3rd Circuit later reversed her decision, its rationale was that the plaintiff had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies, not that Barry's take on the FPDP was wrong.
Using that "unrestrained" and "virtually boundless" authority to deport a legal resident based on the opinions he has expressed raises obvious problems under the First Amendment, notwithstanding Secretary of State Marco Rubio's insistence that Khalil's case "is not about free speech." FIRE argues that the deportation threat constitutes viewpoint-based discrimination, which is presumptively unconstitutional, and amounts to government retaliation for constitutionally protected speech. It says that would be true even if Khalil had expressed support for Hamas (which he denies) because "philosophical support for a terrorist organization (let alone mere overlap of certain political beliefs) is fully protected by the First Amendment."
Does it matter that Khalil is not a U.S. citizen? In the 1945 case Bridges v. Wixon, the Supreme Court held that "freedom of speech and of press is accorded aliens residing in this country." That case involved a longtime legal resident from Australia who was deemed deportable based on the allegation that he had been affiliated with the Communist Party.
"Once an alien lawfully enters and resides in this country, he becomes invested with the rights guaranteed by the Constitution to all people within our borders," Justice Frank Murphy wrote in a concurring opinion. "Such rights include those protected by the First and the Fifth Amendments and by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. None of these provisions acknowledges any distinction between citizens and resident aliens."
Trump's sister made the same point in Massieu. "Make no mistake about it," Barry wrote. "This case is about the Constitution of the United States and the panoply of protections that document provides to the citizens of this country and those non-citizens who are here legally and, thus, here as our guests."
At the height of the Red Scare in 1952, the Supreme Court nevertheless rejected the First Amendment claims of several immigrants who were threatened with deportation because they had been members of the Communist Party. But that decision in Harisiades v. Shaughnessy was based on an understanding of the First Amendment that the Court later repudiated.
"The claim is that, in joining an organization advocating overthrow of government by force and violence the alien has merely exercised freedoms of speech, press and assembly which [the First] Amendment guarantees to him," Justice Robert H. Jackson wrote in the majority opinion. "The assumption is that the First Amendment allows Congress to make no distinction between advocating change in the existing order by lawful elective processes and advocating change by force and violence, that freedom for the one includes freedom for the other, and that, when teaching of violence is denied, so is freedom of speech."
Not so, Jackson said, citing the Court's 1951 decision in Dennis v. United States, which upheld criminalization of membership in the Communist Party based on a "clear and present danger" exception to the First Amendment. The Court had recognized that exception in the 1919 case Schenck v. United States, which involved Socialist Party leaders who were prosecuted under the Espionage Act for distributing anti-draft literature during World War I. But the Court renounced the "clear and present danger" test in the 1969 case Brandenburg v. Ohio, which held that even advocacy of criminal conduct is constitutionally protected unless it is both "directed" at inciting "imminent lawless action" and "likely" to do so.
The Supreme Court's approval of deporting legal residents on ideological grounds, in other words, hinged on a view of the First Amendment that also tolerated criminally punishing U.S. citizens for their political affiliations. Needless to say, that is not how the courts (or most Americans) understand freedom of speech today.
The Trump administration's invocation of the "unconstitutionally vague" FPDP, FIRE notes, is apt to have a chilling effect on the speech of university students. In fact, that is Trump's explicit goal.
During his 2024 campaign, Trump said, "Any student that protests, I throw them out of the country. You know, there are a lot of foreign students. As soon as they hear that, they're going to behave." After Khalil's arrest, Rubio explained the message that the Trump administration is sending to students who engage in "anti-Semitic activities" on campus: "We're going to kick you out. It's as simple as that."
Jewish friends who oppose Khalil's detention insist he is not remotely antisemitic and favors a peaceful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But even speech that is explicitly antisemitic or pro-Hamas is constitutionally protected, and the power that Rubio is exercising sweeps much more broadly, encompassing any speech related to foreign policy that he views as contrary to the national interest.
"Allowing the Secretary of State to retaliate against speakers if he deems it in the national interest would place the United States among strange bedfellows when it comes to freedom of speech," FIRE says. It notes that the Chinese government asserts the authority to censor or punish speech that undermines "the interests of the state," while Russia's laws "permit the '[r]estriction of access to information' in the name of protecting 'morality,' its system of government, and the 'security of the state.'" Saudi Arabia likewise "prohibits expression that serves any 'foreign interest' conflicting with the 'national interest' or that 'stir[s] up discord among citizens.'"
The United States "has charted a different course than the world's censorial kings and regimes," FIRE says. "Secretary Rubio's attempt to deport Mr. Khalil violates the First Amendment and betrays more than two centuries of American commitment to free and open expression."
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How many times does it have to be said? ONLY CITIZENS HAVE RIGHTS! Why? BECAUSE RIGHTS COME FROM GOVERNMENT!
Natural rights to not exist and it is not the duty of government to protect our rights. Rights are a gift from government that are bestowed onto citizens and citizens only, which means they can be taken away as well. Freedom of speech? Only if government says so. Right to bear arms? Only if government says so. Due process? Only if government say so. That's why libertarians are so stupid. They don't agree with leftists and Trump defenders who understand that government is the source of our rights. They actually think that people have rights regardless of what government says. So stupid. And the clowns who wrote the Constitution using phrases like "The right to keep and bear arms" instead of "government gives the right to keep and bear arms" had no idea of what they were talking about. What a bunch of morons.
/if Trump defenders were honest
Stupidly wrong as usual. No one has a natural right to come here.
Khalil is free to say whatever he wants back in Algeria.
Yes I know you don't understand what natural rights mean because you judge everything based upon who, not what.
You don't seem to understand what natural rights are either, if you think incitement to violence is a natural right.
Don't give us the verdict, give us the evidence. Like this:
You respond to any criticism of Dem spending by claiming Reps are just as bad on spending. There are probably 10,000 examples of you doing this. Conversely you feign outrage when someone responds to criticism of Reps by evaluating Dems on the same topic. So you went from the world's foremost practitioner of whataboutism to the world foremost opponent of it solely based on whether the issue helps Dems or Reps.
In fact you have literally never applied to yourself or leftists the standards you use to criticize the right. I've pointed out you doing this hundreds of times.
Meanwhile you assert I base my conclusions on Team but can't identify a single instance.
Great argument against a strawman with my name on its shirt, but it doesn't change the fact that you not only don't understand the concept of natural rights, but you outright oppose it. Just like the leftists you hate.
Tell me, what are natural rights?
When the Constitution refers to rights as something that exist, as opposed to something created by government, do you think that's wrong?
Do you believe that people have rights inherent in their humanity, like speaking their mind and defending themselves, or do those rights come from government?
From what I can tell your answers are "Fuck you", "Fuck yes" and "Government". Just like the leftists you hate.
it doesn't change the fact that you not only don't understand the concept of natural rights,
You're right that my comment doesn't change that. It doesn't need to however since your assertion is backed by no evidence.
From what I can tell your answers are "Fuck you", "Fuck yes" and "Government"
This is a sign of your inability to reason as once again you skipped the evidence portion of the process Your only basis for such conclusions is that you can think of them and therefore I must be guilty of them. As us you're focused on what you wish were relevant rather than what I asserted.
Alrighty then. You can't articulate natural rights, you don't understand the difference between giving rights and protecting rights, and to you the only thing that matters is who is doing it. Understood. The only difference between you and the leftist you hate is who you hate. That's it.
You can't articulate natural rights, you don't understand the difference between giving rights and protecting rights
You skipped the evidence section again. Didn't anyone ever teach you how to analyze anything?
I argue from premises. Can't have communication unless you share premises. For libertarians, one premise is natural rights. People who founded this country were into that. Until you articulate that you understand the concept, we're talking past each other.
I argue from premises.
Because you don't support your conclusion with anything but assertion you're arguing from authority, which is amusing since you have none.
Do you even know what a premise is?
All it is is something that everyone agrees upon. Can't talk about addition unless all parties agree that 1 + 1 = 2. If someone thinks the answer is 3 then you won't communicate.
What happened is Marshal argued you into a corner and now you're flailing, which is typical.
""Can't talk about addition unless all parties agree that 1 + 1 = 2.""
But we are not taking about math.
Do you know the difference between an inductive argument and a syllogism? Aware or not, your example is saying we cannot have inductive arguments.
Are we looking for new premises or arguing from them? Either way you'll have more luck teaching the concept to a barking dog than to Marshal, not that there's much of a difference.
""defending themselves,""
I'm in NYC where you can get arrested for defending yourself. So much for the natural right.
I don't think anyone has won a court case when defending themselves by invoking the natural right to defend.
We have a legal system, not a justice system. And it's not based upon natural rights.
""We have a legal system, not a justice system.""
That what I would expect a liberal to say.
Our justice system is based on the law not the liberal definition of justice. You run into the problem of who decides what justice is? If that is left to each individual, then law is about the who not the what.
You're obfuscating.
Add "obfuscating" to the list of terms Sarc doesn't understand.
That's what's called "Government violating your rights." You have a natural right to defend yourself. Government doesn't recognize it. Doesn't mean you don't have that right. I means that assholes will hold your hands or punish you if you try.
When the judge finds you guilt for it, what should you do? Is the judge out of bounds for violating my rights? Can I stand up for rights by ignoring the judge?
""Doesn't mean you don't have that right""
If you can't exercise it, you do not have it.
Slavery was ok because it was lawful. I get it.
Going with the false equivalency on this one, Sarc?
""Slavery was ok because it was lawful. I get it.""
Obviously, you don't.
Slaves did not have freedom because they were not allowed to exercise it. It did not matter how many people pointed out freedom exists as a natural right.
Not a strawman, a dead-on articulation of your entire oeuvre
This has nothing to do with this issue. The evidence is in the article. LEGAL aliens have the same rights. CAn you not read?
They will never agree that there is zero right to recieve a green card or visa.
Whatever you say, Subprime Moron of Strawmanica.
Still absolutely refusing to use strawman correctly I see.
No shit, folks. Sarcasmic honestly thinks it means "people who disagree with me".
Ideas™ !
He’s not the one posting strawmen day-in and day-out. That’d be you, Strawcasmic.
Self awareness is not an ideal in sarcasia.
Hard to be self-aware when you’re a blackout drunk.
Poor sarc.
That is sobering. Oh wait.
Ran out of Allen's I see. Never liked the stuff. And being lactose intolerant, mixing something with milk isn't my bag. You do you though.
You ran out of Allen’s and decided to notify the commentariat? Do you lay the empties at the base of your Jesse shrine?
You're the one who said you were sobering up.
You’re lack of self-awareness could be sobering but not a strong word choice given it references a drunk.
Thanks for reminding me why I shouldn't have removed you from the most coveted club one can be in in these comments. No worries. You're cool now. Besides, I hate puns, and that's the only thing you've got going for you.
You like alcohol, closet progressives, using strawmen, obsessing over Jesse (tall, looks like a cop Jesse), playing the victim card, retard White Mike, and not taking personal responsibility (it was your ex, it was CPS, it was that short lesbian, orangemanbad, etc). Block me if you want, you are free to do so and idgaf.
The town drunk here needs to be put down.
A citizen has an unlimited claim for the government protecting their rights absent a due process conviction. An alien's claim on the government to protect their rights is limited to while they are in country and accorded the privilege of being in the USA. Being in the USA for an alien is not a right. There are due process considerations, but they are not as stringent as for citizens.
Residency in the USA is not an inalienable right for aliens.
Nuh uh! -every open borders advocate
Honest? What a damn joke. Here’s some honesty, because almost hidden in a clause in this multi-paragraph dribble, let me emphasize for those who may have missed it. Massieu v Reno was reversed and vacated. It is of zero authority, despite the tendentious BS of the author of this piece.
JS;dr
Not trumps sister! Case closed then!
What the actual fuck. Lol.
Saying lying on a government application is unconstitutional is a wild assertion though. Go with that Jacob. It's almost as bad as listing legal expenses as legal expenses.
What is vague about being in the leadership of a group endorsing terrorism?
"IF I MASSAGE WHAT SHE SAID I CAN SAY TRUMP'S SISTER OVERRULED HIM! CASE CLOSED!!!"
If I was mockingly mimicking a leftist making a legal argument, even i would think quoting a woman who actively campaigns against her brother and wants him locked up would be a step too far.
JS is the jeffsarc of Reason editors.
Well then; if FIRE says it is unconstitutional, no need to bother the actual courts to decide this issue, right?
It is true that the president's sister was overturned, but not on the merits; it is equally true that her reasoning on the merits has never been upheld.
This clown again?
Speaking of free speech, I can't help but wonder, if Mahmoud Khalil had been advocating for the destruction of blacks instead of Jews, would this article have been written?
Oh heck no! They'd have white washed it.
Of course not, because there would be nothing to write about. If he'd joined the KKK (which hates Jews) then it would be honky dory (honky, ha ha). No problemo and no deportation because they're WASPS. Instead he promoted an ideology represented by brown Muslims. Destruction of Jews is ok if you're not brown and Muslim. It's all about who, not what.
You don’t just have TDS and JDS, you’re just completely bonkers. Did it ever occur to you to step back from the computer, TV, and news, and just take a short hiatus to get your head on straight, dudette?
He should just kill himself. Booze or otherwise.
Now you shouldn't say that, that's too extreme. No one needs to off themselves. Every life can have some value.
After all, if sarc left, who would make these wonderfully amusing, troll posts? He provides a valuable service; might get boring if he didn't troll everyone into responses.
But anyone that refers to the people who wrote the constitution "clowns" and "a bunch of morons" can't be taken too seriously.
"And the clowns who wrote the Constitution using phrases ... had no idea of what they were talking about. What a bunch of morons."
Funny, what those "morons" wrote is still remembered and referenced almost 250 years later. Nothing he said will be remembered next year.
This just shows how insane sarc is. He's built this mythology that's completely contradicted by reality. But he continues to insult other people based on it apparently not realizing we can tell the difference.
I deal in principles. You deal in principals.
We both know that's wrong though don't we? After all I have shown for years that you have never applied to yourself or the left a principle you used to criticize anyone else. Meanwhile my principles are consistent.
But none of that matters to you because you'll say anything to attack the right.
You ignore what you don't believe exists. Like all those articles on Reason that have been critical of Democrats and of Biden. You say "What articles? Reason is never critical of Biden or Democrats! Because of that they have no principles! They're hypocrites!" And when the articles are shown to your face you say "That wasn't critical enough and there's not enough of them! They're hypocrites!" In both cases "They're hypocrites, that invalidates whatever they say because they are hypocrites!"
Always who, not what.
Your only principle is to argue against principals.
Just how much straw did you pack into that comment, Sarc? Save some for the farm animals.
You say "What articles? Reason is never critical of Biden or Democrats!,
It's amusing you just make shit up. You who constantly complain that people don't address your specific comments . Wait, don't tell me that's yet another standard you expect others to live up to but can't mange yourself.
Your only principle is to argue against principals.
Again we see you assert the verdict without the evidence. This is how propagandists work. But it is certainly true of you.
False.
You deal in dishing out bullshit, strawmen, and false equivalencies when you're not busy lying your drunk ass off.
Leftists don't mind setting up asinine rules because their institutional control gives them the power them to override them when that is in their interest. So for example even though the equal protection clause is written into the constitution and we further have the Civil Right Acts prohibiting racial discrimination in education they did it anyway. Even worse our courts are so corrupt they allowed it simply because left wing institutions claimed it was a good idea.
So the article would never have been written because he never would have allowed a green card in the first place.
Jeez, how hard is it to get rid of one Hamas supporter who trespassed, damaged property, and denied students the civil and contractual right to travel (to and from class)
Hey Jacob, can you ask FIRE and trumps sister if this was unconstitutional?
https://www.nytimes.com/1981/01/22/us/justices-revoke-us-citizenship-of-a-nazi-guard.html
Good grief, why does everyone at reason have such a boner for this guy?
They care more about this guys privelege of a visa/green card than they do any of the speech rights for Mackey, various lawyers petitioning courts, Tarrio, etc. It is wild.
Reason is literally with the terrorists now.
Because he's the left's latest darling.
""That's especially problematic when it is used to punish speech.""
What about punishing actions?
It's punishing him for the violations of agreed to terms when he was allowed into the country.
Of course. But some people like to gloss over the actions and claim it's about speech.
And gloss over the actual law governing the conditions of his visa. Which is mostly open borders bullshit, like the lies Jeffy spouts here.
Jewish friends who oppose Khalil's detention insist he is not remotely antisemitic and favors a peaceful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
No, no, see I have Black friends! /sarc
Also, for what it's worth some Jewish students seem to hate Jewish people almost as much as Palestinians do.
If he does in fact favor a 'peaceful solution' rather than a final one, I'd wonder why he associates with groups who explicitly want violence and endorse an October 7th style attack on American soil?
See, I have a personal hang up where I'm not going to associate with people or organizations who are diametrically opposed to my end goals. Apparently this guy doesn't, or is so entirely ignorant of the group that it's a miracle he was made a 'spokesperson' in the first place.
Students and student groups are generally idiots, so I suppose it's possible he simply wasn't aware of anything about the organization he supposedly speaks for...but that seems worse not better since they don't even particularly hide their associations with actual terrorist groups. He'd have to be willfully ignorant not to know that.
Its interesting Sullum keeps asserting this as if it were conclusive. But another Jewish student dropped multiple classes to get away from him because he was so extreme and full of hate. I wonder why her opinion doesn't count.
Khalil did it first, so it's OK.
/sarcbot3000
Does Sarcbot also run on alcohol?
some Jewish students seem to hate Jewish people almost as much as Palestinians do
Those are the Kapos. Some Jews have a bizarre attachment to the people who want them dead. They're as crazy as the "queers for palestine".
-jcr
How does Trump’s barber feel about it? Oh wait, who gives a fuck.
A foreign national running his mouth can do so from his foreign shit hole. Deport the motherfucker.
Don't you know?
The *guests* you invited into your house make all the RULES..... /s
You can't just kick them out when you don't like what they say... right? /s
Maybe there's a reason the "privileges or immunities" are "of citizens" instead of guests. (14A)
nyah nyah! one judge said! one judge said!
You'd think with Jacob being the 2A guy, he'd understand many of these left wing judges are often wrong. I mean he writes occasional articles about it.
we need a pool on the date this place runs with Marbury v. Madison: Disgrace 101
At this point any connection to FIRE is the same as the ACLU. We know we are going to get a dishonestly framed version of events with garbage legal arguments. They are left-wing partisan actors and should be treated as such.
I don't really think that's fair. In fact, their involvement is one of the things that makes me doubt the administrations position on this.
FIRE would need to fall a hell of a lot further to rival ACLU levels of dishonesty and partisanship.
He isn't being deported due to speech. He is being deported due to his actions as a member of a group that illegally took over buildings and set up illegal encampments on college campus. How is this so difficult for you to comprehend?
Had the secretary of state used the law to deport several foreign students attending flight schools in the US back in 2000 and 2001 maybe they wouldn't have been able to murder over 3000 people in one day.
The campus protests are valid and are descended from the protests that helped end the US involvement in the illegal and immoral war in Vietnam. I can only hope these protests going on lately will help end the US involvement in the Middle East.
They will not.
We can hope you will contract a painful terminal illness.
Protests are valid. Taking over buildings and setting up encampments is illegal and are not valid.
It's perfectly legal to deport someone for treason--you know: "giving aid and comfort to the enemy."
Trump's just using the wrong law.
Inferior courts must follow Harisiades just like they once had to follow Baker v. Nelson and Roe v. Wade.
These are definitely inferior courts.
The Courts went looking for the Constitution of the United States of America, couldn't find it anywhere and long ago gave up trying.
Judge Trump Barry wrote that the FPDP contains “utterly no standards provided to the Secretary of State or to the legal aliens subject to its provisions."
It would therefore seem to be that the FPDP raises an unlawful delegation issue as well as a First Amendment issue. But don’t hold your breath waiting for the ACLU to raise that argument.
Wonder what the reaction would be to a non citizen permanent resident organizing a KKK March through Howard Univ.??
The State Department maintains that, in matters regarding deportations, it has always been free to violate ordinary standards of due process, and to do so with no deference at all to equal protection of the law.
That is probably correct, but the invocation of the Alien Enemies Act may have placed that status in mortal danger. During the two centuries since that statute was passed, there have been libraries of case law regarding the 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, and 14th amendments, all of which are incompatible with the Act. It is time for the SCOTUS to repair the wreckage.
But that is why you are wrong !!! Libraries of case law puts Trump absolutely beyond simple solutions . You imply that he is in for trouble because of intervening laws. But until whatever changes the legal landscape he invoked a real law. Live with it.
Sorry, but no. All nine of the Supreme Court jurists excelled at dodgeball in grammar school. Not one of them was ever hit by a single ball at any time after birth. They can dodge taking a principled stand on any case brought to them with the greatest of ease!
Trump's sister said "The soup needs more spice" but the President of the United States said "tastes good to me"
What a great way to hide behind a nobody related to a Somebody. Many readers are just laughting at you.
As for FIRE, you like them when you like them, and don't when you don't.
I know, how about you write an article on what you think about an important topic without consulting Gwyneth Palthrow's manicurist and the Association for Official Opinions
Fuck you, Sullum, with a barb-wire-wrapped broomstick. I really don't care if my cousin agrees, but TDS-addled assholes like you will search for any ally.
Fuck off and die.
"Although the 3rd Circuit later reversed her decision, its rationale was that the plaintiff had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies, not that Barry's take on the FPDP was wrong."
This is typical legal doublespeak for, "We just HATE to declare Federal laws to be unconstitutional no matter how bad they are so we will ALWAYS find a way to avoid striking them down!" That's why there are over four thousand unconstitutionally broad and vague laws listed in the Code of Federal Regulations. Isn't it funny how no one ever challenges those laws until some bureaucrat does something they don't like citing one of them?
FIRE Says
LOL.
There's the JoUrNaliSm we know and respect from Jakey Jakey News Is Fakey (and Emma Camp). Sign up for that Reason+ subscription now guys! Where else are you going to find AI-assisted echo chamber narrative effectively self-sourcing on the internet???
I have to shake my head in wonder at the fairly blatant "lawfare" being used to try to keep the president from doing anything. He really needs to start just ignoring those district judges; they clearly have no national jurisdiction. (Perhaps either the Supreme Court will rule on that soon, or the bill in the house right now that addresses that, will fix the problem).
But I wanted to write about the title of the article (which doesn't seem to be click-bait this time). So the law Trump is using is unconstitutional? Really? So this law, which is still on the books, and has been since Congress passed in in 1952, is now somehow "unconstitutional"? Why? Because someone (Trump) actually is using it?
That's "judge shopping' .,..in what way does the fact she is his sister mean anything. Do you ever negate her opinion by quoting her brother, the President. Might use this in Logic class
Mike Johnson's trash collector and Macro Rubio's lawn service guy are both sure this is justiciable. What a relief