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Fifth Circuit Rules Against Texas in Case Where State Claimed Immigration and Drug Smuggling Qualify as "Invasion"
The ruling is mostly based on statutory issues, but also covers the "invasion" question.

Yesterday, the US Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled against Texas in United States v. Abbott, a case where the federal government is suing the state of Texas for installing floating buoy barriers in the Rio Grande River to block migration and drug smuggling, creating a safety hazard and possibly impeding navigation. The Biden Administration claims this violates the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899. Texas argues otherwise, but but also cites one of the "invasion" provisions of the Constitution as justification for the state's actions. Texas relies on Article I, Section 10, Clause 3 of the Constitution, which provides, "[n]o state shall, without the Consent of Congress, . . . engage in war, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent Danger as will not admit of delay." Texas contends that illegal migration and drug smuggling qualify as "invasion," and therefore the Constitution gives the state the power to take military action in response, even if doing so might violate a federal statute, and even if there is no congressional authorization for war.
In previous writings about this case, and the broader issues raised by claims that immigration and drug smuggling qualify as "invasion," I have explained why such contentions are badly wrong as a matter of text and original meaning, and why accepting them would set a dangerous precedent empowering states to engage in war without congressional authorization, and the federal government to suspend the writ of habeas corpus at virtually any time it wants.
In August, a federal district court ruled against Texas on both the statutory and constitutional issues, and entered a preliminary injunction against Texas. Yesterday, the Fifth Circuit affirmed, in a divided 2-1 ruling.
The majority opinion by Judge Dana Douglas focused almost entirely on the statutory issue. However, it does also note that it upholds the district court's ruling that the federal government is likely to prevail on the merits (one of the criteria for upholding a preliminary injunction), and this applies to the district court's ruling on the "invasion" argument, as well as the statutory one.
In a dissenting opinion, Judge Don Willett argues that the majority got the statutory issue wrong, mainly because the part of the river in question is not "navigable," and therefore the relevant statute doesn't apply to it. He also argues that the government failed to prove that it would suffer "irreparable harm" if the injunction was denied, or that the balance of equities and the public interest require an injunction. However, he also noted that "Texas has not offered concrete evidence that the barrier has saved lives or reduced illegal crossings and drug trafficking." Significantly, Judge Willett did not endorse Texas's invasion argument.
I won't opine on the statutory issue. Both the majority and Judge Willett make some good points there. My interest is focused on the "invasion" theory, which has enormous significance that goes beyond this specific case. I am happy that, so far, none of the judges who have considered the case endorsed it. For those keeping track, the district judge is a Reagan appointee, the two judges in the Fifth Circuit majority are Democratic appointees, and Judge Willett is a libertarian-leaning conservative appointed by Trump.
Texas will likely try to get the Supreme Court to hear the case. If the Court takes it, I hope they too will reject the "invasion" theory, regardless of what they do on the statutory question.
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A few million people coming across a national border without permission or due process seems to be the textbook definition of an invasion.
It's more the "discount homeschooling outline traded among poorly educated, white grievance-consumed, superstitious slack-jaws" definition.
I regret using a word Prof. Volokh has banned (when used to describe conservatives). I mistakenly thought this was a general Reason.com discussion, unrestricted by viewpoint-driven censorship, rather than a Volokh Conspiracy discussion, regarding which Prof. Volokh is entitled to impose such censorship.
Oh, SNAP, Artie -- now what are you going to do when that post stays up untouched, and thus one of your favorite superstitious myths goes down the tubes? Talk about the end of an era.
Being the uber-helpful person I am, I'll bookmark it for future reference.
The proprietor instructed me not to use the word. His playground, his rules.
Perhaps he will once again cause my comment to vanish. Or maybe he won’t. I have a vague recollection he indicated he muted me. Or, maybe he’s too busy packing his bags.
These desperate mental gymnastics to try to maintain the unfalsifiabilty of your superstitious belief system after you slipped up and said the words you've sworn for a decade you can't say would put a number of renowned cults to shame.
I invite Prof. Volokh to correct any inaccurate statement I have made about his repeated censorship. I suspect he would like nothing better than to wreck my credibility (if only because I quantify the bigotry he and his fans exhibit regularly at this blog).
But he won't.
It isn't just because of his cowardice.
It also isn't because of his hypocrisy.
Instead, he knows he not only acknowledged his partisan censorship but also boasted about it.
Plus, he knows we both (and UCLA) still have the emails.
That rankles him, I imagine, but he still has enough tether to the reality-based world to recognize the situation.
Carry on, clingers.
What's he going to do? He's going to keep repeating his CSB, of course.
No, it's an invasion. History describes such as invasions, even if they take a century or more.
Note: Somin likely opposes free universal health care. He cannot have a logically consistent reason for it given his insanity on immigration.
So you imagine what Somin thinks and then discount any logically consistent reason for it.
There are innumerable logically consistent reasons someone who holds Somin's position on immigration might oppose universal free health care.
I mean, on what principle(s), other than people should be able to move as freely as possible as that promotes economic justice and political freedom do you think his immigration policy preferences rely upon?
I assume you mean that you intend to make one of those arguments in vogue in these comments lately. You'll argue that, because Somin is in favor of greater immigration he must support general proposition X, which you will state with the broadest possible terms, and then you will say because he believes X, it necessary entails free health care for everyone and free popsicles too, because he just wants everyone to have free stuff. But that's not what his pro-immigration arguments are about. At all.
He may support free universal health care for everyone or he may not. But those arguments have virtually no overlap with the premises and logical steps getting him to his pro-immigration stance.
I'm beginning to think conservative commenters on these boards can't find enough actual hypocrites, so they have to make up hypothetical positions that turn Democrats, leftists, and anyone else with whom they disagree into hypocrites.
I suppose when you've been a "family values", Bible-thumping, Trump supporting, cultural warrior, you need the psychological safety of assuring yourself that everyone else is at least as much of a hypocrite as you are.
The conservative commenters do not criticize the most prominent hypocrites at this blog. It could be a firm of courtesy toward their hosts.
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The problem is that they're also stupid, so they don't understand what libertarians actually think.
There is this. Touche.
Ultimately Somin is a LEFT left libertarian and I've seen nothing from him arguing against either the welfare state or taxation in general so I'm assuming he's all for it because it's "nice" to rob your countrymen to show off your compassion and pay for the wants of millions of illegals.
QED.
If Prof. Somin is a "LEFT libertarian," why does he continue to associate with a white, male, bigotry-saturated, right-wing blog whose target audience consists of faux libertarian, authoritarian, disaffected clingers?
Unless you contend he is too stupid to understand the situation, this seems inexplicable.
"I’ve seen nothing from him arguing against either the welfare state or taxation in general so I’m assuming he’s all for it"
Again with the, "I will take this specific position that I don't like, restate it in the broadest possible terms, then assume from that new position that the person must believe this other specific, but wholly unrelated thing, and so he is an [insert derogatory term]."
Are people at this blog becoming dumber? Because this sort of argument is incredibly stupid in both form and substance. And it seems to be proliferating.
I like the way you just toss in the phrase "due process," despite it being nonsensical in that context.
Pancho Villa is universally recognized as having invaded the United States and that was with ~500 guys. Back then, we knew how to handle such things and the army shot them, pursued them all the way back to the border and then some, only turning around when they ran out of ammunition. Pancho Villa wasn't a government actor, he was explicitly in rebellion against the government at the time. Of course millions of people illegally entering is an invasion. It's an invasion and when the courts get to the merits, it should be ruled as such-- Texas should take this all the way to SCOTUS if they have to. And the army should be deployed on the border with authorization to use lethal force, which will dry up the invasion forces in a hurry.
and why accepting them would set a dangerous precedent empowering states to engage in war without congressional authorization, and the federal government to suspend the writ of habeas corpus at virtually any time it wants.
If you're troubled by the parade of horribles you envision because it's an invasion, then the people you're irate with are the invaders. They have agency and have chosen to invade the United States.
The basic problem here is that while it is perfectly legitimate to want a secure border and to oppose undocumented immigration, the notion that a bunch of workers and mothers with their children crossing the border for a better life are some sort of military force that warrants a military response is one of the literally dumbest and most bloodthirsty arguments in all of politics. You really have to be a depraved person who doesn't value human life at all to think of these folks as invaders.
The right wing needs to cut it out. It's not an invasion. It's a legitimate debate about who we let into the country and what the criteria are. But if you start talking about invasion, you are just immoral.
+1
+1
You are right. They don't warrant a military response. The Law isn't a military response. It's pretty bad these days when Judges base their opinions on their political views instead of the letter of the Law. You can almost tell which Party appointed them by their opinions.
We have immigration laws. The Supreme Court has said only the federal government may enforce these laws. But the President, in gross dereliction of his Constitutional duty to "take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed."
So, we have a federal government that won't enforce the law and state governments that are prohibited from enforcing it. States are desperate and can hardly be blamed for making novel constitutional claims, even ones that might offend the delicate sensibilities of some. Does anyone really think the federal government's purported concerns about "obstructing navigation" are sincere?
We can talk about what point discretion is abused later. Suffice to say that you are drawing a bright line that the judiciary doesn't seem to agree with.
But this here thread is about the term 'invasion.' And there, you argue two wrongs make a right. Which is dumb, of course.
And you don't even do a good job justifying the second wrong. You claim states are desperate? What's the crisis? It's not the economy, and crime rates are not driven by immigration.
The crisis is just populist nationalism. Talking tough about some outgroup.
Which is good politics, but bad policy. And sometimes downright monstrous. You start calling people invaders, it's not long before you're full on Dr. Edding it up with machine guns and mine fields and the like.
They're not using the term "invasion" to be provocative, but because that is the term used in the Constitution in what is generally referred to as the "Invasion Clause".
Which is a clause about invasions, not this.
I never would have guessed you were such a strict textualist.
He's a flexible textualist when it's the argument he needs in the moment, the rest of the time, not so much.
This IS an "invasion", which is to say a mass movement into the country contrary to our laws. The fundamental problem is that it's an invasion the federal government wants, and thus flatly refuses to defend the states against.
The Constitution contemplates a situation where the federal government isn't able to respond quickly enough to an invasion, (Communications and travel were quite slow when it was drafted.) so that states would have to deal with the situation until federal troops could be raised and sent.
It didn't contemplate a situation were the federal government approved of the invasion, and conspired to keep it going. That's more Declaration of Independence territory, actually.
How do you explain all the judges calling that notion "bullshit"?
Federal judges are nominated and confirmed by federal office holders. Since at least the FDR administration they've been chosen on the basis of being deferential towards federal claims of power.
Expecting a dispute between a state and the federal government to be impartially mediated by a federal judge is just nuts.
Mr. Bellmore's line of argument is just the delusional, disaffected, on-the-spectrum, antisocial, right-wing bigotry talking.
It is an invasion, which is to say a definition that is utterly novel until the right just discovered it.
It's nativist posturing, and it rationalizes both public and private violence.
And then you kinda intimate those who disagree with you are a disloyal Fifth column, on the side of the invaders.
If I didn't know better, this language looks like someone psyching up to go and take out some federal officials.
Thank you, Dylan. Exactly this.
Preposterous. They are illegally violating the border with the intent to permanently stay in the territory they occupied. They are as invader as invader can possibly be; the only question left is how America responds to this invasion.
And the response favored by the left is to capitulate. As Israel retaliates against invaders and Ukraine protects itself against invaders, at the expense of the US taxpayer, the United States is supposed to capitulate to invaders. It’s a world gone mad. There’s no need for any enemy army to make a move against the United States. Invaders simply have to walk in and subvert it from the inside out. America is sleepwalking towards complete military defeat without firing a single shot.
They are as invader as invader can possibly be
Trenchant argument.
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They don't "occupy" any "territory." They rent apartments. Sometimes houses. Sometimes even buy them.
Why are you too stupid to understand the difference between military and civilians?
Those apartments and houses would be occupied territory-- they've been taken over by invaders who infiltrate and occupy against the sovereign government that we the people elected.
"Why are you too stupid to understand the difference between military and civilians?"
You're the one too stupid to understand the situation. If Israel adopted the United States immigration policy, there would be no need for October 7. Hamas could simply walk in and vanish into the country, with lethal results. Same thing for Russia/Ukraine-- the Russian army could simply walk in and, bam, de facto Russian province. Neither Israel nor Ukraine would do this because they're not idiots. Meanwhile here in America, the invading army is moving in without any resistance. Worse than that; the government hands them cell phones and anything else they might need to complete their invasion. That the invasion force isn't in uniform doesn't really change anything. Hamas doesn't have a formal uniform either.
You really don't know the difference between military and civilian.
Wow.
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I see we're in the "Too stupid to know what basic English words mean in context" phase of the discussion. I mean, yes, one could say that the immigrant's rented apartment is "occupied" in the same sense that the word "occupied" is displayed on the door when a passenger uses the airplane's restroom. But obviously this is an entirely different sense of the word than an enemy army seizing and controlling land from another country; a citizen of the U.S. who rents the apartment also "occupies" it in that sense, but nobody would therefore describe the apartment as "occupied territory."
The apartments have not been "taken over." They've been voluntarily exchanged for money with and by the actual property owners — who, notably, do not include the government.
There is no fucking "invading army," you sociopath. These are individuals coming here to work for a living, not soldiers sent by a foreign country. What "changes something" is not the lack of uniforms; it's that they're not coming here to attack the U.S. and seize U.S. territory.
Like I said, you are too stupid to understand the difference between a soldier and civilian.
The notion that physical barriers in a river are “a military response” makes your accusations look like projection.
Physical barriers along a state border are the premier military response. Think the Great Wall of China, or Hadrian's wall.
The joke here is the idea that they're impeding navigation in unnavigable water.
Another rousing meeting of Libertarians for Authoritarian, Bigoted, and Cruel Immigration Policies and Practices is convened, at one of the leading faux libertarian gathering spots.
Continuing to associate with these clingers is making you less credible and persuasive in the context of the American mainstream, Prof. Somin. Your ideas deserve better, but I do not fault the culture war's winners for discounting (maybe, eventually, dismissing) you in this context.
Are you in favor of Israelites entering and creating settlements in Palestine?
If not, why not?
Are the Texas border-crossers "creating settlements" in Texas?
YES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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No.
It is immoral and counterproductive.
It feeds an unsustainable trajectory, a continuing cycle of violence, oppression, selfishness, and superstition-based stupidity that seems destined to lead to pain for everyone involved, especially Israel (unless one believes Israel can operate successfully without America’s political, economic, and military support, which I strongly doubt).
The substance of the opinion on the "invasion" aspect:
The Appeals Court has not guided the District Court in making a final decision on whether Texas is being invaded.
On the substance, this is a case involving federal authority and if the federal government is wrong it has the right to be wrong. Biden is allowed to like AMLO better than Abbott. Really the only chance Texas had was to get the river declared non-navigable.
A separate lawsuit considers whether the federal government is allowed to remove land-based barriers along the border.
The habeas corpus thing gives me pause – I hesitate to refer to mass illegal immigration as an invasion, because then the feds (and probably the states) could lock people up without trial.
Assuming that the feds are serious about trying to enforce the immigration laws, then it might be of at least some help to stop those who try to crash the border. I mean, plenty of people find other ways to sneak in, but blatant border-crashing is at least one thing which can be blocked.
Is there any particular method with a good record of blocking border-crashers?
Willett, the faith-based "libertarian" . . . was he also a fan of government-installed razor wire designed to snag women and children? Did he express an opinion on government's use of torture?
So plants and animals can be "invasive" but not people?
You had to change words from invasion to invasive.
Why do you think that is?
Don't break his brain. Nah, go ahead.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Biological_invasions
The "back[ward] contamination" is the real deal.
Annihilation (2018), now that was an invasion!
The United States has the power to use its military to secure its borders if it wants to.
But nonetheless, customary international law in effect at the Founding, and before and since, has long distinguished between armed military or paramilitary groups entering a country seeking to loot or conquor it, and unarmed civilians, wanted or not, entering a country seeking to join it.
9/11 was an invasion. This is not.
It’s not a hard distinction to make.
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Clearly it was something that the entry of unarmed civilians is not; but infiltrators committing terrorism does not seem like an invasion, nor was there war waged by any state before the federal government did so.
So you are in favor of Israelites entering and settling in Palestine?
Let's see the tortuous argument threading the eye of the needle. Lemme strap in here.
Ironically I don't have a problem with it, but I don't seek to lie about invasion status. There are historical records of one culture in a dirt layer, then a completely different one a century later. Prehistorical, nobody knows what really happened.
The reality-based world should probably reject all superstition-rooted claims to the relevant land and prevent and superstition-based government from operating there.
Look who is talking about "reality".
"Yesterday, the US Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled against Texas in United States v. Abbott, a case where the federal government is suing the state of Texas for installing floating buoy barriers in the Rio Grande River to block ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION and drug smuggling,..."
FIFY
Biden, Ilya, Kamala and every other leftist hate America and want to see it destroyed by any means necessary and how dare Texas get in the way of that.
The United States had conpletely open immigration until the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, and nearly completely open immigration for another 4 decades after that. And most currently illegal drugs were legal under Federal law into the 20th century. Coca-Cola got its name because the original formula had cocaine in it.
Is it your position that nearly every politician in the country was seeking to destroy the United States during this period?
George Washington? Abraham Lincoln? All of them? They all sought to destroy the country? Everybody who didn’t follow your preferred policy position sought to destroy this country? All this country’s founders?
Maybe if the Republicans tried befriending instead of Trump's racist mongering twist on leftist Bernie Sanders and Ceasar Chavez bans on immigration due to depressing union wages, it wouldn't be so bad.
Time was, border state Republicans did exactly that.
Why, exactly, do they want to "destroy America"? Where are they going to live?
Nothing damages our republic like assholes who yell that disagreeing with them is disloyalty.
Right down to your name, you are obsessed with negative partisanship.
You are part of the problem with our politics today.
Always finding new ways to say nothing.
Ironic comment!
The 5th Circuit appears to have intentionally avoided deciding the merits of the invasion issue, noting that the question of whether a stage can unilaterally declare it has been invaded and wage war, and whether and under what standard (if at all) a federal court has power to review its declaration, is a weighty one. It sidestepped the question. It said that there was insufficient evidence the barrier actually had much effect on illegal immigration, and hence Texas would not be irreparably harmed by removing it.
So the invasion issue was decided based on lack of irreparable harm, deliberately avoiding the merits question.
"the question of whether a stage can unilaterally declare it has been invaded and wage war," is explicitly settled in favor of the states by the invasion clause.
"and whether and under what standard (if at all) a federal court has power to review its declaration" is where the real dispute is.
The problem for Texas is that the federal courts are insanely deferential to the federal government in disputes between states and the federal government.
Long term, the only way to settle this is a constitutional convention, and giving the invasion clause teeth with an amendment.
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Of course, that's not how it works; you continually make this mistake. That A has the discretion to do X under circumstance Y does not mean that A has the discretion to unilaterally decide that circumstance Y exists.
Who does (have the discretion to decide)?
I would say we are being colonized and settled. Easier case to make. What is the difference between migrants and settlers?
https://americanmind.org/salvo/settlers-versus-migrants/
How has mass immigration benefited Europe?
We don't know the counterfactual.
Try again, no counterfactual required.
"How has mass immigration benefited Europe?"
I'm not sure what you mean by "mass immigration," but one obvious way that immigration benefits Europe is that Europe would be shrinking rapidly without immigration.