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My New Lawfare Article on Why "Immigration is Not Invasion"
Texas is wrong to equate illegal migration and drug smuggling with invasion. If accepted by courts, the argument would set a dangerous precedent.

Today, Lawfare published my article on why Texas is wrong to equate illegal migration and cross-border drug smuggling with "invasion" in two important cases currently being litigated before the federal courts. Some of the points made in the article are developed in greater detail in an amicus brief I recently filed in United States v. Abbott, on behalf of the Cato Institute and myself.
Here's an excerpt from the article:
In two important cases currently before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, the state of Texas has advanced the argument that illegal migration and drug smuggling qualify as an "invasion" authorizing the state to "engage in war" in response, under Article I of the Constitution. So far, federal courts have uniformly rejected such claims. But if they were to accept them, drastic consequences would follow. Border-state governments would be empowered to attack neighboring countries, even without congressional authorization. And the federal government would have the power to suspend the writ of habeas corpus—thereby detaining people without due process—almost anytime it wants. In addition to these practical considerations, Texas's "invasion" argument is at odds with the text and original meaning of the Constitution.
In United States v. Abbott the federal government is suing Texas for installing floating buoy barriers in the Rio Grande to block migration and drug smuggling, thereby creating safety hazards and possibly impeding navigation…. The Biden administration claims this violates the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899, which bars "[t]he creation of any obstruction not affirmatively authorized by Congress, to the navigable capacity of any of the waters of the United States." In United States v. Texas, the state is defending the legality of S.B. 4, a new state law that criminalizes unauthorized migration, expands state law enforcement officials' powers to detain undocumented migrants, and gives Texas state courts the authority to order removal of migrants convicted under the law. The federal government claims S.B. 4 is preempted by federal law and that it infringes on federal authority over immigration.
In both cases, Texas argues the federal government's interpretation of the relevant statutes is wrong. But, more importantly, the state also contends that the Invasion Clause of Article I of the Constitution gives it the power to install buoys in the river border it shares with Mexico and to enforce S.B. 4 even if federal statutes forbid such actions. Article I, Section 10, Clause 3, of the Constitution states that "[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 claims illegal migration and drug smuggling qualify as "invasion" and that, therefore, the Constitution gives the state the power to take military action in response in defiance of federal statutes, and even in the absence of congressional authorization for war….
The constitutional text undermines the idea that "invasion" includes illegal migration and smuggling. The Invasion Clause relied on by Texas allows states to "engage in war" in response. That suggests an "invasion" must be the kind of organized assault that would normally justify full-scale war in response, including sending troops to attack and occupy the country from which the invasion originated….
The Guarantee Clause of Article IV of the Constitution states that the federal government must protect the states "against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened) against domestic Violence." Here, invasion is paired with "domestic Violence"—which in 18th century usage refers to uprisings against the state government, not the modern use of the term to denote violence in family and intimate relationships. Under the long-standing doctrine of noscitur a sociis, "a word may be known by the company it keeps." Here, it makes little sense to assume that "invasion" includes nonviolent actions, when it is coupled with "domestic Violence."
The original meaning reinforces the text….
In his Report of 1800, James Madison,one of the leading framers of the Constitution, responded to claims that the Guarantee Clause authorized the notorious Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 by emphasizing that "[i]nvasion is an operation of war,"and thus the Clause does not authorize restrictions on immigration. The same logic applies to the use of "invasion" in Article I.
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This is not invasion in the military sense, which I suppose is the sense in the Constitution. It is, however, invasion in the historical mass-migration sense that looks at things on a century or longer scale.
Of course, that’s exactly what Europe did to North America, mass migration invasion over centuries. It was even for the same reason: live free and make a better life for yourself.
Conservatives don’t like it? You used to. Take a clue from border state Republican governors and make inroads. After all, it is Republicans much more comfortable with the economic observation, in an economically free land, the more, the better.
Don’t let a far left wing Ceasar Chavez/Bernie Sanders clone tell you to shut the borders to protect jobs in contravention of the above, much less that + “and they’re dirty Mexicans rapin’ and fentanyllin’ and stuff anyways.”
Of course, that’s exactly what Europe did to North America, mass migration invasion over centuries. It was even for the same reason: live free and make a better life for yourself.
What Europe did to North America was a pretty explicit conquest. Not only were they opposed by the existing North American governments (as much as they could), but they European colonists had zero intent of joining Aboriginal governments or subjecting themselves to Aboriginal rule.
Unless you think that Central/South American immigrants are planning on opening their own autonomous colonies in the US then it’s not really comparable.
Like with the Democrats today, the Pilgrims were seen as a way to overthrow the majority power, the Narragansetts.
.
What are you babbling about? Seriously. Are we to infer that you support a policy of open borders? If not, then what is the optimal limit and how do you enforce it?
Machine guns!!!!
Patrol the border with A-10s. Mass deportations.
What Europe did to North America was a pretty explicit conquest
Not even close
It is impossible to sustain an open border, AND, a robust welfare infrastructure.
So nice of you to only focus on the cheap labor, like Democrat slavers across time. Who cares about Americans, certainly not you or any Democrat politician so long as your grass is cut for cheap. Care to address the exploding costs of the social welfare and managerial state due to this? No?
Why not take a page from the Massachusets politicians when faced with the crippling influx of 50 to Martha's Vinyard? Somin was falling all over himself to defend that.
Nobody cared about the cost to Martha’s Vinyard. They cared about the kidnapping and human trafficking perpetrated by the governor of a US state.
When you leave someone for dead in the desert, the problem isn’t with the cost to the desert.
Don't feed the bears.
Machine guns......
So it's not an invasion.
Texas is not engaging in war, either.
Agreed.
Problem is, Texas says they're engaging in war in an attempt to conduct their own foreign policy in conflict with that of the United States.
Ilya's point is the same as yours: Texas is wrong about that.
"an attempt to conduct their own foreign policy"
So now let's define "conduct of foreign policy."
Why? I already proved you right.
I think it's worth remembering, (And hopefully some day the Court will remember it!) that the Supremacy clause makes federal law supreme, not federal policy.
Federal immigration laws? Supreme.
Administration policy of not enforcing them? Not supreme.
In a sane legal system, Texas would prevail on the basis of the supremacy clause, because it's the federal government violating the supreme law of the land here, not Texas.
In all this time you have yet to point to a single law that the United States is failing to enforce.
A couple such claims already went to the Supreme Court and they said you're wrong. Are you just disagreeing with the Supreme Court? If so, why should anyone care?
Yeah, I'm disagreeing with the Supreme court. I'd have thought my first paragraph made that obvious. I'm not one of those 'legal realists' who pretend that, just because the Court's decisions are final, they're never mistaken.
Every since FDR put a scare into them, and Presidents started specifically picking Justices for this purpose, the Court has been insanely deferential to the federal government, allowing vast illegitimate power grabs. It's the Federal Constitution, but have you noticed that it's almost exclusively enforced against the states? Cases where the Constitution is enforced against the federal government are damned rare.
For instance, Bruen, such a big deal. How many federal gun laws has the Court struck down to date?
Interpreting the Supremacy clause to make, not duly enacted and constitutional laws, but instead federal policies, even if they run contrary to those laws, supreme? Just another example of that deference. The Constitution goes to some length to specify what's "supreme", and the word "policy" is not found in that list.
Oh, and here's a pretty good list of those violations. I'm sure you'll say that the laws he violated are impossible to comply with. But somehow the previous administration was much more compliant...
Ok boomer, have fun shaking your fist at that cloud.
The supremacy clause also makes the Constitution Supreme, and the Constitution gives power over foreign relations to the feds and prohibits the states from conducting it. This is why Texas, while making stupid arguments, has not advanced one quite as stupid as yours.
From a practical perspective, Texas would be better advised to try to get Plyler v. Doe overturned.
Almost like Blackman, this is another pointless post.
Not because I think Somin doesn't have a right to post whatever he feels like. He certainly can write whatever he wants. It's just that, of course, he's isn't going to agree it's an invasion, but the foundation for that belief has nothing to do with the particulars in question. Since he doesn't believe any migration restrictions are legitimate, his reasoning ends up being of little consequence to the legal issues at stake. No court is likely to accept his presumptions.
Ilya is good with an expansive definition of "insurrection" but a parsimonious definition of "invasion."
Insurrection: It's still spaghetti even if there's just a few spaghetti noodles.
Invasion: If there's an overwhelming amount of macaroni, it counts as spaghetti.
Since he doesn’t believe any migration restrictions are legitimate...
A blatant lie.
Anyway, if you think there’s something wrong with the reasoning in the article, let’s hear it. Sounds to me like you’re the one who’s letting your priors interfere with your thinking if you can’t even find a way to engage with the material.
As far as I can recall, Somin has never found any real world restriction on 'migration' that he'd admit it be legitimate to enforce.
He'll grant that the federal government could bar plague carriers, or known terrorists. But not that it could demand people entering the country present themselves for a determination if they were such.
He'll grant that the federal government could bar the entry of a column of hostile, uniformed soldiers.
But "migration"? No, his position is that Congress AND the states totally lack any authority to bar people from entering the country peacefully.
his position is that Congress AND the states totally lack any authority to bar people from entering the country peacefully.
False. The US government deports people and turns “peaceful” people away at the border all the time. Legitimately, even in Ilya’a view.
He often argues that we should have an even more inviting immigration policy than we do, but not that the US lacks the
authority
to have a policy at all.A column of armed, uniformed soldiers would be defended as economic migrants exercising their 2A rights. And once they started opening fire he'd quickly ignore their existence.
I don't think it's a lie. Prof Somin has argued in the past that he doesn't even believe the Constitution gives the country to authority to regulate immigration.
Here he is, arguing exactly that: Does the Constitution Give the Federal Government Power Over Immigration?
Yes, it's his position that the federal government, with very few exceptions having to do with enemy soldiers in time of war and the like, has no power at all to bar anybody entry into the country.
Yes, I'm aware of that article. I read it as an academic thought experiment, not as a normative legal theory. He acknowledges many times throughout the piece that the theory conflicts with precedent and practice.
The doctrine that Congress has broad “plenary” power over immigration is long established and – today – rarely questioned.
He doesn't suggest that the precedent be overturned. And current United States law is legitimate under the precedent.
Yes, he knows he is advancing a position contrary to precedent and practice. He's still advancing it, and relentlessly.
"He doesn’t suggest that the precedent be overturned."
Bullshit. There's no way to read his closing chapter, "Prospects for Change", as anything but advocating that it be overturned.
He’s still advancing it, and relentlessly.
If that were true, you’d think it would’ve been the thrust of his amicus brief. It wasn’t.
There’s no way to read his closing chapter, “Prospects for Change”, as anything but advocating that it be overturned.
Huh? Are you incapable of reading? He says not only that the precedent is unlikely to ever be overturned, but that there are “legitimate” reasons it shouldn’t be.
Then he goes on to talk about “incremental steps” that the judiciary could make instead.
Man, why do something as stupid as lie about the contents of your own link? People can click it, it’s right there.
Apparently you're the one who can't read.
"It is unlikely that longstanding precedents giving the federal government broad power over immigration will be overruled in the near future."
"in the near future". This is hardly the same meaning as "unlikely to ever be".
Even if the Supreme Court never overturns... likely to be long and difficult... even if it is never pared back...
That's not saying it's unlikely, only that it's not guaranteed. You can certainly advocate things you think will be difficult, and where success isn't guaranteed.
He's advocating open borders, I said. Not predicting that they're inevitable.
No, you claimed he thought all immigration restrictions are
illegitimate
. He does not claim that; he acknowledges that they’re the law of the land by the hand of the Supreme Court.Yes, he advocates for a more open policy, both in terms of propriety and originalism. But those of us whose minds haven’t been broken by MAGA can understand the difference between advocating for change and Maddog’s original charge that he
doesn’t believe any migration restrictions are legitimate
.Laken Riley could not be reached for comment.
They're not trying to take over. It's not an invasion.
They ARE and we need to kill them.
"Border-state governments would be empowered to attack neighboring countries, even without congressional authorization."
But, of course, the actual invasion clause explicitly contemplates states being empowered to do this under the appropriate circumstances. We're discussing whether or not those circumstances exist, not what Texas could do if they did.
"And the federal government would have the power to suspend the writ of habeas corpus—thereby detaining people without due process—almost anytime it wants."
Likewise with the suspension clause; If tomorrow Congress declared that illegal immigration was an invasion, and necessitated suspending the writ along the border, do you suppose the courts would get to dispute their judgement? Congress is explicitly entitled to declare whether or not there is a war!
So, your parade of horribles really settles nothing: If crowds of illegal immigrants forcing their way through physical barriers, and overrunning national guard were a qualifying invasion, your horribles would be constitutionally legitimate, and there's no debating that.
It's still all on the question of whether what is going on is an invasion, and the perfectly constitutionally legitimate consequences of answering that in the affirmative is not enough to force us to say it is not. You need to establish that independently.
"In his Report of 1800, James Madison,one of the leading framers of the Constitution, responded to claims that the Guarantee Clause authorized the notorious Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 by emphasizing that "[i]nvasion is an operation of war,"and thus the Clause does not authorize restrictions on immigration."
And here you are again with Madison's Report, and your out of context quote. Madison was indeed asserting that invasion was an act of warfare. Which in no way establishes that what is happening now is not an invasion! It merely establishes that, if it is an invasion, we are being subjected to an act of war. I think you'd find that many people you're in serious disagreement with, would gladly agree with Madison on that point.
But, of course, Madison's point here is that whether or not an invasion was actually taking place was simply irrelevant to the exercise of a power unrelated to waging war, the deportation of "friendly aliens" lawfully present in the country. A power which the federal government at that time lacked, it being prior to 1808.
Really, the Madison quote doesn't support your position at all, at best it's irrelevant to it.
So, you think we're at war with Russia then?
After all, if illegal immigration is an act of war, then the Russian state forcing illegal immigrants across the border into Finland is an act of war against Finland. And since Finland is a NATO member then the US and other members are obliged to defend Finland by joining the war against Russia.
Hmm... I suppose the means Finland is also at war with illegal immigrants in the US. I wonder if that means that Russia will form a military alliance with unauthorized Mexicans harvesting fruit in California.
"After all, if illegal immigration is an act of war, then the Russian state forcing illegal immigrants across the border into Finland is an act of war against Finland. "
Absolutely is. And we are. War is frequently inconvenient.
Are you serious?
You can have an act of war, without a war. The US should know that better than anyone – we have been in dozens of wars since WWII, with none of them officially declared as such. And when the US was attacked on 9/11, the NATO countries invoked their charter to come to the defense of the United States, even though the enemy, Al-Qaida, was a non-state actor, and no one had formally declared war on it.
But if they were to accept them, drastic consequences would follow. Border-state governments would be empowered to attack neighboring countries, even without congressional authorization.
This is ridiculous fearmongering. No one, not even Texas, is arguing for that.
Strange things can happen if you want to parse the meaning of these terms so strictly. On Volokh and Reason, all the time I see references to the Iraq War, Vietnam war, etc. But the US hasn't officially declared war on anyone since WWII. So none of those were technically wars. If we use Prof Somin's reasoning here, we should be consistent and strip away all wartime benefits and honors from any veterans since WWII as unearned.
Conversely, prof Somin has been very willing to stretch the meaning of "insurrection" well beyond its original context of a conflict like the US Civil War, to include the Jan 6 riot. It just seems like wildly double standards are being applied to the meaning of these words.
SCHOLARS of the law used to at least maintain this pretense of being objective and impartial analyzers. Somin has really dispensed with that and leaned into being a zealous advocate.
No one, not even Texas, is arguing for that.
Yes, that's exactly what Texas is arguing for. How do you think their argument works, if not like that?
I have not seen any argument by anyone that Texas has the right to attack a neighboring country as a preventative measure. Sounds like a slippery slope argument.
If a state court tried to rule that my city police can't arrest and remove an invader in my home, that only state police can do so, and only upon conviction, because the state reserves the right to prosecute home invasions, it would be immediately apparent that such a ruling is ludicrous.
Texas is literally arguing that it has the right, under present circumstances, to engage in war against Mexico. I'm not sure what else you think "engage in war" means if not to attack.
Your analogy is ludicrous because it confuses arrest, prosecution, deportation, conviction, and detention. It's too confused to make any sense. Try again.
Texas is literally arguing that it has the right, under present circumstances, to engage in war against Mexico
Bullshit. Texas is arguing it has the right to repel an invasion. Federal law requires all foreign visitors to present themselves at a port of entry or customs before entering the US. Persons who enter the country otherwise are foreign invaders.
You are conflating the right to use military force to repel an invasion (which is expressly allowed) with the right to engage in military action against a foreign nation.
It says "engage in War." It doesn't say what you say, "engage in Defence."
As far as the two-party Punch and Judy show, the Republicans want to use the immigration issue to get votes from non-immigrants, while the Democrats want to import future Democratic voters. The rest is eyewash.
Any discussion of sensible immigration policy will be outshouted by the partisans.
A sensible immigration policy was agreed upon until MAGA took over the Republican Party and scuppered it.
Is the current policy sensible?
What about the late Barbara Jordan’s recommendations? Were they sensible? Why not?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Jordan#U.S._Commission_on_Immigration_Reform
Of course, Jordan, though a prominent Democrat, was tragically unaware that anything even somewhat more restrictive than the status quo is fascist and racist.
If you're not against allowing people to immigrate, you're in favour of them or their descendants voting. Somehow Democrats are going to magically control who they vote for. Allowing, even encouraging, people to immigrate is a normal thing normal countries do. Trying to equate immigration with a military invasion is only normal for putative fascists. But yeah, they're both essentially the same.
I’ve rejected the invasion claim. This buttresses my point – that from the partisans’ point of view, you can either call it an invasion, or else denounce Barbara Jordan’s proposed reforms as xenophobic, racist, etc., etc. There is no golden mean, there’s just backing one party or the other.
Oh, you've rejected it have you? That doesn't mean it isn't gradually becoming a Republican platform and when Trump really seizes on it the way he did the wall we'll be in real interesting territory.
'There is no golden mean'
When people are telling you there is no way of telling right from wrong, they're justifying themselves doing something wrong.
Once again: I am not now, nor have I ever been, a member of the Republican Party of the United States.
So...what do you think about the late Barbara Jordan's proposed immigration reforms, or is she a fascist too?
"When people are telling you there is no way of telling right from wrong"
Who's telling you this, the people in your head?
Madison in 1800 was not objectively analyzing the Constitution, he was a partisan writing against a policy proposed by his political enemies.
Even if he was being objective, his points don't really support Somin.
His point was that the federal government could not exercise a power unrelated to warfare, deportation of lawfully present aliens from friendly nations, on the basis of war powers. Especially since 1808 had not yet arrived, so that all immigration matters were still reserved to the states.
He wasn't arguing that a column of men tearing down border fortifications and then forcing their way past soldiers to enter the country illegally wasn't an invasion. He'd probably have been fine with characterizing such an event as an invasion. The people he was defending hadn't done anything remotely that warlike.
Oh this is a fun game. I think Madison was much smarter than you, Brett, and he would realize that for something to be an invasion, i.e. a "operation of war," there has to be a nation or at least some kind of entity undertaking the operation.
A bunch of guys isn't an invasion since there's nothing on the other side of it. The bunch of guys aren't doing war-like operation, nor is anyone else.
"or at least some kind of entity undertaking the operation."
You really think there's no organization behind this? Seriously?
I don't have crippling paranoia of the lifestyle, Brett, so no.
Enlighten us, Brett.
What organization is behind this, with what purpose? And don't start on the Great Replacement.
Well, of course the Joooos are. We're behind everything.
More in sorrow than in anger, though. Those silly Jews.
I didn't know that the Mexican drug cartels were Jewish...
One of the Lost Tribes.
'A bunch of guys isn’t an invasion since there’s nothing on the other side of it'.
AGAIN with this bullocks approach, Randy? Do you think your question begging example about what constitutes 'invasion' or not is going to succeed in determining the idea's, the constitutional idea's, limits? Of excluding the case from being a bona fide example?
LOL.
Prof. Somin's immigration points predictably precipitate a flurry of xenophobic rants from half-educated conservatives.
Amid this steady stream of bigoted, unkind, and obsolete right-wing content at the Volokh Conspiracy, here is a different perspective concerning immigration and what has made modern America great (against the wishes and efforts of our vestigial clingers).
Although it would face an uphill battle against a rather large and venerable body of precedent, I think that Texas would have at least a somewhat better argument if it took the position that the Importation and Migration Clause, under which states were acknowledged to have a primary power to dcide which persons they wish to have imported or permit to migrate into their territory. subject to a federal veto, regulatory, and taxing power for those the state chose to admit, was not in fact extinguished in its entirety by the Civil War amendments. It could argue that while the 13th Amendment extinguished the importation component of the clause, and the 14th Amendment may have extinguished the migration component so far as it applies to US citizens or perhaps even persons coming from within US territory, it did not extinguish the migration component with respect to non-citizens coming from outside US territory, to whom the Bill or Rights does not apply.
It would apply this line of reasoning to conclude that while the Importation and Migration Clause gives the federal governemnt rather comprehensive power over such persons as a border state sees fit to admit, it continues to acknowledge a state’s existing sovereign authority to exclude those it doesn’t, except in cases where the Civil War Amendment granted an individual right to travel. Since foreigners outside US territory continue to have no constitutional right to travel post-Civil War, the Civil War Amendments left the states’ power to prohibit the migration of such extraterritorial aliens that it does not see fit to admit undisturbed.
I'm confused. Any claim the states had under the importation and migration clause, on its own terms, was extinguished in 1808.
"The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by the Congress prior to the Year one thousand eight hundred and eight, but a Tax or duty may be imposed on such Importation, not exceeding ten dollars for each Person."
Ilya apparently hasn't seen the latest videos of migrants forcefully breaking through barriers and knocking over national guard troops. Where's the line Ilya....where?
Or if the founding fathers had seen that video, is there any doubt they would see it as an invasion?