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Ninth Circuit Stays Ruling Against Biden Asylum Restrictions
The 2-1 ruling (divided along surprising ideological lines) is a win for the administration. But they may well still end up losing in the end.
Yesterday, the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit stayed a district court ruling against a Biden administration policy severely restricting asylum applications by migrants crossing the southern border. The decision is a notable victory for the administration. But it is still only a stay pending appeal, and the government might still end up losing the case on the merits.
The most unusual aspect of the ruling is the alignment of votes. Two liberal judges - Fletcher and Paez - voted to stay the ruling. By contrast, conservative Trump appointee Judge Lawrence VanDyke dissented, arguing that the Biden rule is similar to Trump-era asylum restrictions struck down by the Ninth Circuit, and therefore there is no reason to stay the district court ruling against them.
The majority offered no explanation of its ruling beyond saying that "[t]he motion to stay the district court's July 25, 2023, order and judgment…. is granted" and citing a Supreme Court case outlining standards for stays pending appeal. But Judge VanDyke wrote a forceful dissent:
My colleagues in today's majority grant a stay pending appeal of a district judge's order vacating a recently promulgated immigration rule. Only a few years ago, these same colleagues affirmed the same district judge enjoining the Trump administration's rule restricting asylum eligibility for immigrants who entered the United States outside a designated port of entry (the Port of Entry Rule)….
Quickly thereafter, one of my colleagues in today's majority penned another published, precedential decision again affirming a Judge Tigar decision striking the Trump administration's rule restricting asylum eligibility for aliens who passed through another country on the way to the United States without seeking asylum in that country (the Transit Rule)….
The Biden administration's "Pathways Rule" before us in this appeal is not meaningfully different from the prior administration's rules that were backhanded by my two colleagues. This new rule looks like the Trump administration's Port of Entry Rule and Transit Rule got together, had a baby, and then dolled it up in a stylish modern outfit, complete with a phone app. Relying on this court's rationales in our prior decisions rejecting the Trump administration's rules, Judge Tigar concluded that this new rule is indistinguishable from those rules in any way that matters. He's right. For those who value the rule of law, following precedent, and predictability, one must conclude Judge Tigar had no choice but to vacate the current administration's Pathways Rule for the reasons that he first provided and my colleagues then established as binding precedent during the Trump Administration.
Judge VanDyke goes on to say he believes the Ninth Circuit was wrong to rule against the previous Trump policies. But so long as those precedents are on the books, the court must also rule against this very similar Biden policy.
Judge VanDyke is right to highlight the similarity between the two administration's rules. Although the Biden rule is somewhat less restrictive than the Trump rules were (a point VanDyke should have acknowledged), ultimately both run afoul of the text of the 1980 Refugee Act in much the same way. Judge Tigar's district court opinion goes into these similarities in detail.
On the other hand, I think VanDyke is wrong to think the rulings against the Trump policies were incorrect. It's worth noting that one of the key Ninth Circuit decisions against them was written by prominent conservative Judge Jay Bybee. Like Judge Tigar (a Democratic appointee), Bybee noted the incompatibility between these kinds of draconian asylum restrictions and statutory text. That said, Judge VanDyke deserves credit for fairly applying precedents he obviously dislikes. He notes he would "love to join my two colleagues in staying Judge Tigar's ruling," but cannot do so, given the Trump-era precedent.
The key question going forward is whether the majority's decision here prefigures their ruling on the merits. The criteria for a stay pending appeal are vague: "(1) whether the stay applicant has made a strong showing that he is likely to succeed on the merits; (2) whether the applicant will be irreparably injured absent a stay; (3) whether issuance of the stay will substantially injure the other parties interested in the proceeding; and (4) where the public interest lies."
The fact that one of them is whether the applicant has "made a strong showing that he is likely to succeed on the merits" suggests the majority judges believe the Biden rule is legal. However, it's also possible they believe a relatively weak showing on this factor was outweighed by a strong one on the other three, particularly the "irreparable injury" prong (this policy is a key component of the Biden Administration's new border control strategy).
Moreover, in the same ruling the majority also put the case on an expedited briefing schedule. That means a decision will come relatively quickly, and therefore asylum seekers might (in the court's estimation) suffer relatively little "substantial injury" because they won't have to wait long.
On the whole, I think there is still a good chance that at least one of the liberal judges will side with the plaintiffs (and with Judge VanDyke, whose dissent telegraphs his position) when the case is heard on the merits. Ultimately, it's just too difficult to differentiate the Biden policy from the Trump rules those same judges voted to strike down.
I think the liberal judges on the panel will see that, or at least one will. Could I be wrong about that? Of course. We are likely to find out soon enough.
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I rather like Judge VanDyke's writing style = This new rule looks like the Trump administration's Port of Entry Rule and Transit Rule got together, had a baby, and then dolled it up in a stylish modern outfit, complete with a phone app.
And here I was thinking, as a layman, that legal decisions were dry, boring affairs. 🙂
It's only a surprising lineup if you're unfamiliar with the concept of "TrumpLaw": Rulings and precedents that apply only in the context of Trump, neither before nor after him.
The Trump nominee treated the earlier ruling against Trump as normal, precedential law, and applied the precedent. The two liberal judges treated it as TrumpLaw: Only binding so long as Trump was President. And, since Biden isn't Trump, didn't apply the precedent.
You can actually read the cases Brett. Might make your Unfalsifiable and unengaged claims of bias less common.
Sarcastr0, the first rule of TrumpLaw is that you never admit you're engaging in it. So it's not like they're going to come out and SAY that's what they're doing.
Ilya notes that VanDyke is applying the precedent, and the other two are not. TrumpLaw just explains why that's not surprising.
Prof. Somin thinks they are wrong. You think they are lying. You two are making utterly different arguments.
Prof. Somin thinks they're wrong, and can't explain why things lined up the way they did. I think that it's political bias at work, and that the way they lined up is perfectly understandable. Nothing more complicated than "Trump doesn't get to do that because, Trump. Biden does get to do that because he's NOT Trump."
No, that's not at all what happened, Brett.
Procedure matters. This is not a decision on the merits; this is an issue of stay pending appeal. As Somin noted, it is entirely possible that given the factors involved, one (or both) judges who examined the issue believed that given that they don't have extensive briefing on the subject yet, the other factors (especially given that this is a government policy, and the irreparable harm factor) counseled in favor of a stay- and then ordered the expedited briefing.
Once we have the written opinions and the full disposition of the case, we will be able to make a much better determination as to the full reasoning and the merits.
FWIW, I think Judge VanDyke at least has a point that this looks suspicious. And especially since the majority did not explain itself, AT ALL. This is a point liberal Prof. Steve Vladeck makes about the shadow docket- the majorities don't explain themselves and we are left to guess at what they are doing.
The fact of the matter is people may reasonably see this as 2 judges ruling the same policy gets different treatment when it comes from Biden rather than Trump. Which means those 2 judges should have done something to dispel that impression, and did not do so.
I am much less concerned, if only because of the required expedited briefing.
It's not that uncommon for appellate courts to grant stays pending appeals without an opinion- I'm sure you've seen that. Given the equities of the underlying issue and the balance of harms, I can understand why the appellate court might want to at least see full (if speedy) briefing on the issue.
Again, I can't imagine that the "liberal" 9th Circuit judges were worried that everyone would be up in arms about the fact that they were keeping in place a MORE RESTRICTIVE IMMIGRATION POLICY until they received further briefing on the issue. As Ilya wrote, and people keep ignoring, the result is actually against the supposed policy preference one might normally ascribe to all of the judges in question.
It is, but that's exactly what makes it suspicious. (For both sides, BTW- VanDyke may be trying to screw Biden. But at least he offers an explanation!)
I disagree about it being suspicious!
Look, judges (especially, um, some recent ones) may have some ideological or partisan leaning, but they rarely have any great love for a particular administration in terms of that particular administration.
In other words, if you have (supposedly) liberal judge voting to stay a lower court decision pending expedited briefing, and a (supposedly) conservative judge voting against that ... when that is the opposite of their (supposed) ideological bona fides, I think that the actual reason is probably the simplest.
There was a difference in opinion about granting the stay. Two judges wanted to see the full briefing, one judge thought that the likelihood of success on the merits was a dispositive factor. That's a perfectly normal difference of opinion.
We will find out soon enough, when we get actual briefing (so we can really gauge the strength of the arguments) and an opinion.
I'd like them to spell out the differences and exactly what they are doing, because despite what you say, any reasonable observer might speculate that all three members of this panel are voting against what they actually believe (and the positions they have previously taken) because of who is in the White House.
Or, you know, a person might reasonably conclude that there is a big difference between a stay (and expedited briefing) and an opinion on the merits.
And as I wrote below, VanDyke acknowledges that the majority of the panel has the correct result, and that the lack of a stay would cause a severe disruption (which could not be easily undone), and that SCOTUS would likely have to step in and grant a stay if they didn't.
Which means that he had the liberty of having his ... outburst ... knowing that it wouldn't matter.
You are basically denying the reality because you want to defend the 2 liberals.
Seriously, in the real world, nobody says "gee, politics can't have anything to do with this because it's all about technicalities about stays". You are the only person who thinks that, if you really even do.
Biden, folks, is no liberal. He is a centrist. (Perhaps the kind of guy the No Labels people can get behind.)
A senile puppet is as fickle as the breeze on a spring day. Anyone who gets behind him hopes their preferred backers will control him and/or is stupid enough to deserve what they get.
A senile puppet seems definitionally not fickle.
His puppetmasters can change based on the dynamics in rooms that formerly would have been smoke-filled, influenced in part by who is the target of his his Alzheimers-like ire or who his dog sent to the hospital at a key moment.
I call this the Ptolemic theory of politics: "The center is where I am, never mind where most people are."
He looks like a centrist only if you're left wing. He's doing all sorts of things that aren't remotely "centrist" relative to the center of American politics. Like trying to ban gas appliances. Only a few months ago Democrats' public stance on that was, "Are you crazy? Why would we do that?" That wasn't because banning them is popular, you know.
Or his balls to the wall push to replace gas cars with electric. Most people LIKE gas cars, were you unaware of that?
You think captcrisis’s politics are the same as Biden’s?
Captcrisis politically is out at the end of the barbell with the true fruit loops.
No, I think captcrisis thinks Biden is 'centrist' because he's so far left himself that, from where he stands, Biden looks like a moderate. And he's failing to measure Biden relative to American politics, rather than his own politics.
There's a lot of room to be more moderate than captcrisis, and still pretty radical compared to median American politics.
He's only an extremist if you yourself are a right wing extremist, like you, or a 'centrist' who's really right wing but dislikes Trump and constantly has to sensationalise policy differences to make Biden seem as bad as Trump. Being a safe centrist is what got him elected. Being a centrist does not mean 'doing nothing' which is obviously what you'd prefer a democraticallly elected Democrat to do.
Biden is absolutely not a centrist. I don’t know what he thinks personally, and I’m not sure how many if the policies originate with him, but he’s governing as an extremist.
Only because you insist he has to be as bad as Trump so both sides.
No. Only because his policies are extremist. It’s as if he’s governing for the approval of progressive Twitter. Progressives are not centrists. Well, perhaps to you they are.
He’s bad on a stand alone basis. No comparison to Trump necessary. So once again you have to make up a comparison that I haven’t made. Do you ever simply address what someone has said without applying your excessive political bias to fabricate the words and thoughts of others?
" So once again you have to make up a comparison that I haven’t made. "
As I commented yesterday, that is S_0's maddening argumentative style. Unfortunately it is not a mode of constructive discussion. But it is a good way to argue while sitting in a pub and drinking beer.,
Anyone who has read bevis posting for any amount of time knows he is all in on both sides are irredeemably bad only he is objective enough to see.
People don’t like when I bring up when a post of theirs is consistent or inconsistent with their past posting. How calling that out is not constructive I leave as an exercise for the reader.
As someone who has read bevis since he showed up here, I'm breaking my rule long enough to point out that your argument is laughably wrong once relieved of your concocted word "irredeemably."
Nobody believes your shit, not even you. Grow up.
You’re doing it again. I’ve never said I’m the only one. Or thought it.
There are others here that are reasonably objective. The others and I don’t always agree, but we appreciate the honest differences.
The way you react demonstrates that others being objective really aggravates you, even though it means we agree with you sometimes. Just yesterday we agreed on the out of state abortion thing. The problem is you’re totally intolerant of any opinion different than yours.
Yes, you're studiously resisting the comparison, because Trump makes Biden look like the centrist he is, and Biden needs constant shouting and yelling and monstering to make him seem like an extremist, and you have to yoke yourself to the right wing crime-family rhetoric even though the evidence is non-existent. Whereas every time you shrug and say 'yes of course Trump is bad now back to how Biden is bad' you're underlining the differences between the two.
What would qualify as extremism on the Left for you?
Just to get the baseline here.
Currently, thinking the vaccines are poison, Putin’s invasion was justified, and Trump is being framed. Yeah, I know. Weird. I don’t know what their policy preferences are, though, sorry. Generally it seems to be no matter what your aim is - deal with climate change, reduce poverty, improve access to health care - it's always
step 1 - end capitalism.
So, Biden is NOT extreme. Got it. Explains your views. Unsure how banning gas appliances, trying to forgive student loan debt without any Congressional approval, and endless financial support to Ukraine are not extreme, but you do you.
The gas stoves thing, yeah that might be ambitious enough to count as extreme, but it’s hard to distinguish right-wing pearl-clutching from an actual policy. Forgiving student loans? Meh. Bigger and worse debts have been forgiven, bigger cash gifts have been given for stupider reasons. Supporting Ukraine? Nah. A much more moderate and effective approach than Obama’s futile interventions, though more so because he managed to unite international support.
Rarely to never, in my experience. I've pretty much sworn off engaging with him due to the predictable pointlessness of it all.
Forget it Jake, it's the ninth district.
It is?
When is a precedent not a precedent?
I love riddles, especially when I know the answer!
When is a precedent not a precedent?
….when Justice Clarence “Stare Decisis is for Simps and Woke Libs” Thomas is involved.
Thomas is on the 9th Circuit?
In a surprising twist of history, Bill Clinton appointed Clarence Thomas to the 9th Circuit twice, which is why Thomas formed the majority of this appeals panel.
Oh, I thought you were asking a riddle!
See, here's the thing- if you actually want a substantive and serious conversation about law-like substances, you have to show that you are capable of having those. Given your posting history, that's ... yeah, that's not really a thing.
Feel free to continue snarking away!
But effeminate snarking is his whole thing!
What is fascinating to me (for a generous definition of "fascinating," I guess) is how people aren't bothering to understand what is actually happening here before leaping to the usual rhetoric.
Let's start with the basics. This is a Biden Administration policy that ... severely limits asylum applications for those coming from Mexico. Which is what a lot of the Usual Suspects(tm) here want more than anything, except that they don't want this, because, um, Biden.
Then the district court ruled against it - which meant that these restrictive policies would no longer be in place. Which is what the Usual Suspects would hate!
Luckily for them, two liberal judges on the Ninth Circuit voted to stay that decision, which meant that the policy remains in place for now, pending expedited briefing. Except that's terrible, because Libs on the Ninth Circuit who are all for terrible policies, like, um, restricting asylum access for immigration.
On the other hand, it's awesome that one judge would have stuck to his guns and, uh, "opened the floodgates" even before there was a determination on the merits, because Biden sucks, I guess?
Personally, I think it is likely that on the merits after briefing, VanDyke's position will prevail. But I also don't find it that strange that an appellate court would stay a ruling from the district court and order expedited briefing on a decision like this, which will have a profound impact on an issue that is normally of profound federal importance, if for no other reason than courts like to be judicious and reach the right decision.
Even though the stay goes directly against stare decisis, something you claim to support?
Say what? Did you read what VanDyke actually wrote?
He agreed that a stay was the right result, and he agreed that if the Ninth did not grant a stay, then the Supreme Court likely would. He also explicitly acknowledges (albeit in passing) that not granting the stay pending full review would cause disruption in the immigration system; disruption which would, by the way, be incurable if the panel, after full briefing, ended up reversing.
So why write all of this? Basically it was a tantrum. I get it- it probably felt good to get all of that out. But this was just a STAY. Not a decision on the merits. While I happen to think that VanDyke makes good points about the precedent, I also think that given the equities, the panel should have the (expedited) briefing in order to render an actual, fully briefed opinion to apply the facts in this case to the prior precedent- which would then, if necessary, be reviewed by SCOTUS.
This isn't an opinion on the merits. I don't understand why this is hard for people to understand. Oh, wait, I think I do. 😉
I don't get all of the legal arguments made here, but people not understanding loki13's comments and posting stupid comments is why he posts so infrequently. The stay does not overturn any precedent; that may or may not happen as a result of the expedited hearing.
And I should add this.
Two of the three judges were prepared to grant the stay. This meant that VanDyke knew he could issue his cri de coeur with absolutely no negative ramifications.
Would he have made the exact same principled decision if one of the other judges on the panel had wanted to deny the stay, because they wanted to eviscerate this (conservative) immigration policy ... the same one he previously approved of multiple times?
Maybe! But he didn't have to make that decision, did he?