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Supreme Court

The Supreme Court's Next Big Immigration Case

Plus: Ken Burns’ The American Revolution is worth your time.

Damon Root | 11.20.2025 7:00 AM

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Border wall between Mexico and the U.S. | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Adamina | Wikimedia Commons
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Adamina | Wikimedia Commons)

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed this week to reenter the fractious national debate over immigration by taking up a new case, which asks whether asylum seekers who present themselves at the U.S. border may be lawfully turned away or whether they must instead be inspected by immigration officials and entered into the asylum system for further processing.

You’re reading Injustice System from Damon Root and Reason. Get more of Damon’s commentary on constitutional law and American history.

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The case is Noem v. Al Otro Lado. According to the Immigration and Nationality Act, an alien "who arrives in the United States (whether or not at a designated port of arrival)…may apply for asylum." In May, a divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit held that for purposes of federal immigration law, an alien who had reached the U.S. border, yet was still on the Mexican side of that border, had "arrive[d]" in the U.S. "The phrase 'arrives in the United States,'" the majority held, "encompasses those who encounter officials at the border, whichever side of the border they are standing on."

Writing in dissent, 9th Circuit Judge Ryan Nelson argued that "no English speaker uses the term 'arrives in' to mean anything but being physically present in a location." In the dissent's view, "this statutory language is as unambiguous as it gets."

The Trump administration now wants the Supreme Court to side with that dissent. "An alien on the Mexican side of the border may be 'close to the United States,'" the government argued in its brief seeking review, "and may even have 'arrived at the United States border,' but he has not 'arrived in the United States.'"

The immigrant rights group Al Otro Lado, by contrast, has urged the Supreme Court to reject the Trump administration's "narrow" reading of the law. The Immigration and Nationality Act, the group pointed out, "states that any person who arrives 'at a designated port of arrival' will be inspected and may apply for asylum." Thus, "a noncitizen who presents herself to a government official right at the border is…'at' the port, just as someone standing at the front gate of a house is 'at' that house."

We'll find out sometime next year which one of these dueling statutory interpretations finds favor with a majority of the Supreme Court.


Odds & Ends: Ken Burns and Me

In 2014, I interviewed the great documentary filmmaker Ken Burns about his then-latest project, The Roosevelts, a sort of triple biography of Theodore, Franklin, and Eleanor Roosevelt. I have always enjoyed watching Burns' films and this one was no exception. (My favorite of his films is The Civil War.)

But I also had some problems with The Roosevelts, and it was fun discussing those problems with Burns himself. "It was not our intention to make a puff piece," he told me, "but a complicated, intertwined, integrated narrative about one hell of an American family." In my view, he was only partially successful. Among other shortcomings, the film underplayed the Roosevelt family's many abuses of political power. You can read more about it here.

I have Burns on the brain this week for obvious reasons. His latest film, The American Revolution, just premiered on PBS. I have only watched part of it so far, but I count myself a fan. I have especially enjoyed seeing a number of my favorite historians pop up on screen as talking heads. I was delighted to see Rick Atkinson, for example, who, as George Will has put it, now stands as America's "finest military historian, living or dead." If you haven't yet read the first two published volumes of Atkinson's trilogy on the American Revolution—The British Are Coming and The Fate of the Day—you should make haste to a bookstore.

I was even happier to see the late Bernard Bailyn. His monumental 1967 book, The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, is a genuine classic that still makes for illuminating reading today. Bailyn died in 2020 at the age of 97, so kudos to Burns and his team for making a point of including this venerable figure in their film. It's a nice tribute to Bailyn's lasting contributions to the study of early American history.

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NEXT: The Sindex: Price of Audio Equipment Rises 12 Percent Under Trump Tariffs

Damon Root is a senior editor at Reason and the author of A Glorious Liberty: Frederick Douglass and the Fight for an Antislavery Constitution (Potomac Books).

Supreme CourtImmigrationLaw & GovernmentCourtsHistory
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  1. Chumby   3 hours ago

    If Damon Root is standing at the border of an illegal alien rapefugee, he has arrived inside of one.

    Log in to Reply
  2. MasterThief   2 hours ago

    They are supposed to apply for asylum in the first safe country. Unless they are Mexicans, almost all of them are forum shopping at best.

    Log in to Reply
  3. damikesc   2 hours ago

    The judges are claiming "close enough is good enough"?

    What OTHER laws can judges simply change the meaning of the words in the law, especially if the word's definition has not, in any way, changed.

    Log in to Reply
    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

      This year? Seems like any if them trump chooses to not ignore.

      Log in to Reply
    2. Stupid Government Tricks   1 hour ago

      The Supreme Court has been amending the Constitution by reinterpretation since the beginning. Contra Jesse, it happens in Trump's favor as much as against it.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Wizzle Bizzle   34 minutes ago

        There is reinterpretation and then there's claiming the word "in" actually means "anywhere near or outside of". That's too stupid even for activist judges.

        Log in to Reply
      2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   21 minutes ago

        Lol. Amazing how many traits you've picked up from sarc.

        Do you find it strange like sarc does that i cite actual laws. Link to actual legal scholars.

        Meanwhile you're now doing a full sarc constantly. Hilarious.

        We're you even aware that trumps current record at SCOTUS is over 90%? Using the very arguments I've agreed with? Whats your record for predictions btw?

        I'm sorry youre incapable of intelligent thoughts and analysis. But be less like sarc.

        Even when I dont respond or mention you, your Derangement gets the better of you lol.

        Log in to Reply
      3. Social Justice is neither   13 minutes ago

        Which cases are those? As it stands I'm assuming you're largely talking out of your ass just to be contrary. The birthright citizenship case is really the only thing I can think of to contrast against dozens of rulings in violation of the law they're supposedly interpreting just to get Trump.

        Log in to Reply
    3. Chumby   1 hour ago

      Contradicts wet foot, dry foot.

      Log in to Reply
  4. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

    DR^2. Guessing more bad legal analysis.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Chumby   1 hour ago

      DR^2? Damon Root * Doc Retard?

      Log in to Reply
      1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   32 minutes ago

        You talking about the person who “restarted a nuclear reactor “?

        Log in to Reply
        1. Chumby   20 minutes ago

          Doctard’s stupidity rises to the level of globohomo nuclear retardation.

          Log in to Reply
        2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   15 minutes ago

          Doc retard is less efficient for nuclear work than Homer's bobbing bird.

          Log in to Reply
      2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   16 minutes ago

        Damon Root, didnt read.

        Think it would have to be DRRE for Damon Root Retard Esquire.

        Log in to Reply

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