The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Ninth Circuit Denies Government Request for Emergency Relief in Birthright Citizenship Case
The first of what may be many appellate rulings on the Trump Administration's most controversial and questionable Executive Order.
Yesterday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit denied the Trump Administration's request for emergency relief in Washington v. Trump, one of the cases challenging the Trump Administration's Executive Order purporting to narrow and redefine birthright citizenship. Specifically, the Trump Administration sought a partial stay of the preliminary injunction against acting on the Executive Order entered by the district court. The panel of Judges Canby, M. Smith, and Forrest denied the motion, stating simply that the Administration had "not made a 'strong showing that [they are] likely to succeed on the merits' of this appeal."
Judge Forrest (incidentally a Trump appointee) wrote a separate concurring opinion, explaining her reasons for denying the motion. It is reproduced below.
The Government has presented its motion for a stay pending appeal on an emergency basis, asserting that it needs the relief it seeks by February 20. Thus, the first question that we must ask in resolving this motion is whether there is an emergency that requires an immediate answer.
Granting relief on an emergency basis is the exception, not the rule. Cf. Nken v. Holder, 556 U.S. 418, 427 (2009) (noting that a non-emergency stay "is an 'intrusion into the ordinary processes of administration and judicial review,' and accordingly 'is not a matter of right, even if irreparable injury might otherwise result to the appellant.'" (citations omitted)); Labrador v. Poe ex rel. Poe, 144 S. Ct. 921, 934–35 (2024) (mem.) (Jackson, J., dissenting from grant of stay) ("Even when an applicant establishes [the] highly unusual line-jumping justification [for a nonemergency stay], we still must weigh the serious dangers of making consequential decisions 'on a short fuse without benefit of full briefing and oral argument.'" (citations omitted)). Neither the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure nor the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure address what a party must show to warrant immediate equitable relief. Cf. Fed. R. Civ. P. 62(g)(1); Fed. R. App. P. 8(a)(2)(D); Fed. R. App. P. 27(c). Nor do the "traditional" stay factors that we analyze when considering whether to grant a stay pending appeal. See Nken, 556 U.S. at 425–26. But this court's rules provide some guidance. Ninth Circuit Rule 27-3, which governs emergency motions, provides that "[i]f a movant needs relief within 21 days to avoid irreparable harm, the movant must," among other things, "state the facts showing the existence and nature of the claimed emergency." If the movant fails to demonstrate that irreparable harm will occur immediately, emergency relief is not warranted, and there is no reason to address the merits of the movant's request.
Here, the Government has not shown that it is entitled to immediate relief. Its sole basis for seeking emergency action from this court is that "[t]he district court has . . . stymied the implementation of an Executive Branch policy . . . nationwide for almost three weeks." That alone is insufficient. It is routine for both executive and legislative policies to be challenged in court, particularly where a new policy is a significant shift from prior understanding and practice. E.g., West Virginia v. EPA, 597 U.S. 697 (2022); Dep't of Homeland Sec. v. Regents of the Univ. of Cal., 591 U.S. 1 (2020); Nat'l Fed'n of Indep. Bus. v. Sebelius, 567 U.S. 519 (2012). And just because a district court grants preliminary relief halting a policy advanced by one of the political branches does not in and of itself an emergency make. A controversy, yes. Even an important controversy, yes. An emergency, not necessarily.
To constitute an emergency under our Rules, the Government must show that its inability to implement the specific policy at issue creates a serious risk of irreparable harm within 21 days. The Government has not made that showing here. Nor do the circumstances themselves demonstrate an obvious emergency where it appears that the exception to birthright citizenship urged by the Government has never been recognized by the judiciary, see United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.S. 649, 693 (1898), and where executive-branch interpretations before the challenged executive order was issued were contrary, see, e.g., Walter Dellinger, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, Legislation Denying Citizenship at Birth to Certain Children Born in the United States, 19 O.L.C. 340, 340–47 (1995).
To be clear, I am saying nothing about the merits of the executive order or how to properly interpret the Fourteenth Amendment. I merely conclude that, whatever the merits of the parties' respective positions on the issues presented, the Government has not shown it is entitled to immediate relief from a motions panel before assignment of the case to a merits panel. That said, the nature of this case and the issues it raises does warrant expedited scheduling for oral argument and assignment to a merits panel. And our general orders expressly permit this option: "In resolving an emergency motion to grant or stay an injunction pending appeal, the motions panel may set an accelerated briefing schedule for the merits of the appeal, order the case on to the next available argument calendar . . . , or order the case on to a specified argument calendar." 9th Cir. General Order 6.4(b).
Aside from the legal standard governing emergency relief, three prudential reasons support not addressing the merits of the Government's motion for a stay at this point. First, under our precedent, the decision of a motions panel, even if published, is not binding on the future merits panel. In East Bay Sanctuary Covenant v. Biden, we held that "[t]he published motions panel order may be binding as precedent for other panels deciding the same issue" at the motions stage, but it is not binding on the merits panel in the same case "because the issues are different" as presented in a motion to stay and in the underlying appeal of a preliminary injunction. 993 F.3d 640, 660 (9th Cir. 2021). A motions panel resolving a motion to stay "is predicting the likelihood of success of the appeal" whereas the "merits panel is deciding the likelihood of success of the actual litigation." Id. This is a fine, but important, distinction that has implications for the parties and the court. Because the procedural context informs the questions to be answered, "we do not apply the law of the case doctrine as strictly." Mi Familia Vota v. Fontes, 111 F.4th 976, 980 n.1 (9th Cir. 2024) (quoting United States v. Houser, 804 F.2d 565, 568 (9th Cir. 1986), abrogated on other grounds by Christianson v. Cold Indus. Operating Corp., 486 U.S. 800 (1988)). Therefore, anything a motions panel says about the merits of any of the issues presented in a motion for stay pending appeal is, on a very practical level, wasted effort.
Second, as a motions panel, we are not well-suited to give full and considered attention to merits issues. Take this case. The Government filed its emergency motion for a stay on February 12, requesting a decision by February 20—just over a week later. We ordered a responsive brief from the Plaintiff States by February 18, and an optional reply brief from the Government by February 19—one day before the Government asserts it needs relief. This is not the way reviewing courts normally work. We usually take more time and for good reason: our duty is to "act responsibly," not dole out "justice on the fly." East Bay Sanctuary Covenant, 993 F.3d at 661 (citation omitted). We must make decisions based on reasoned judgment, not gut reaction. And this requires understanding the facts, the arguments, and the law, and how they fit together. See TikTok Inc. v. Garland, 604 U.S. ---, 145 S. Ct. 57, 63 (2025) (observing that courts should be particularly cautious in cases heard on an expedited basis); id. at 75 (Gorsuch, J., concurring) ("Given just a handful of days after oral argument to issue an opinion, I cannot profess the kind of certainty I would like to have about the arguments and record before us."). Deciding important substantive issues on one week's notice turns our usual decision-making process on its head. We should not undertake this task unless the circumstances dictate that we must. They do not here. Third, and relatedly, quick decision-making risks eroding public confidence. Judges are charged to reach their decisions apart from ideology or political preference. When we decide issues of significant public importance and political controversy hours after we finish reading the final brief, we should not be surprised if the public questions whether we are politicians in disguise. In recent times, nearly all judges and lawyers have attended seminar after seminar discussing ways to increase public trust in the legal system. Moving beyond wringing our hands and wishing things were different, one concrete thing we can do is decline to decide (or pre-decide) cases on an emergency basis when there is no emergency warranting a deviation from our normal deliberate practice.
* * * * *
I do not mean to suggest that emergency relief is never warranted. There are cases where quick action is necessary. But they are rare. There must be a showing that emergency relief is truly necessary to prevent immediate irreparable harm. The Government did not make that showing here, and, therefore, there is no reason for us to say anything about whether the factors governing the grant of a stay pending appeal are satisfied. The Government may seek the relief it wants from the merits panel who will be assigned to preside over this case to final disposition. For these reasons, I concur in denying the Government's emergency motion for reasons different than relied on by the majority.
[Note: This order was issued yesterday, not today, and the post has been edited accordingly.]
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I'm glad this issue is moving quickly through the courts, because the ultimate resolution will be by SCOTUS. At that point, all bets are off (e.g. Dobbs).
Nobody cares what the 9C thinks on this issue.
Then why did the government ask them to render an opinion?
It is a step to Scotus.
No, it is not
And even if this were in a posture for the SCT to review on the merits (and SCT takes the case), you realize you are going to lose 9-0, right?
Maybe, maybe Thomas and/or Alito would side w the Trump position, but I doubt it. And I guess it is possible that Sotomayor dies and Trump is able to replace her with a complete hack, but even then there is no way he is getting 5 votes.
No. I would bet that Scotus rejects the extreme birthright citizenship theory that many have accepted for decades. Beyond that, it is hard to say. I expect a sharply divided opinion.
The problem is, the Supreme Court has accepted the extreme radical position on birthright citizenship for a century and a half, from even before it came to accept the extreme radical position on black people - you know, the idea that white people have to treat them as if they are ACTUAL equals, not just equals in some abstract, technical, very limited sense.
No, the SC has only found that the child of Chinese permanent residents is a citizen. There are some dicta on birthright citizenship, but nothing contrary to Trump's order. Those are old decisions, that did not consider the unworkable mess we have today.
I think the SC is likely to find in favor of some limits on birthright citizenship.
This is pure copium.
SCOTUS expressly stated otherwise in Wong Kim Ark; the notion that it doesn't apply to the children of Mexicans just because it used the word "Chinese" is not how judicial opinions work.
Scotus merely has to say that the logic of Wong Ark does not apply to children of nonresident aliens, legal or illegal.
While it was a fact that the parents in Wong Kim Ark happened to have been permanent residents, this was in no way relevant to the holding. The Court gave a general rule with exactly 4 very specific exceptions: Ambassadors and diplomats, invading armies, ships in American waters flying foreign flags, and members of Indian tribes who are not US citizens.
Except for those 4 categories and only those 4, the holding applies to everyone else. This couldn’t have been clearer.
When the Supreme Court decides a traffic or a tax case when the facts involved a Ford, the same rule applies when the car involved is a Chevy. Same here.
The fact the parents were lawful permanent residents no more means the holding applies only to children of lawful permanent residents than the fact that the parents were subjects of the Emperor of China means the holding only apllies to subjects of the Emperor of China, or the fact the case came from San Francisco means the the holding only applies in San Francisco, or the fact that a particular judge decided the case below means the holding only applies to cases from that judge. Facts irrelevant to the holding are just background facts, nothing more.
The Court gave a general rule with exactly 4 very specific exceptions: Ambassadors and diplomats, invading armies, ships in American waters flying foreign flags, and members of Indian tribes who are not US citizens.
What was the principle they offered for these four specific exceptions ?
What was the principle they offered for these four specific exceptions ?
You know the answer to this, since it has been beaten to death in every single one of these comment threads for weeks now. I'm not even going to bother stating the obvious, since you can only be asking that rhetorically, even I give you the benefit of the doubt that you aren't just trolling.
Supreme Court decisions only apply to the case before it. Yes, there is some dicta about four exceptions, but it is not up to the SC to list exceptions. Those exceptions and others were not argued, and there is no precedent for what the exceptions should be.
The current migrant crisis would be sufficient to reconsider those exceptions anyway.
Jason : You know the answer to this, since it has been beaten to death in every single one of these comment threads for weeks now.
How strange that you imagine I read every post and every one of the comment threads on the VC ! Do you ? Does anyone ?
Still not quite as strange as Purple Martin who imagines I read all the court filings too !
That that's what "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" means.
So you think every pregnant woman in the United States who wasn't named Norma McCorvey was still banned from having abortions after January 22, 1973?
You don't need to have read them all. Your question has readily available answers in many places. At best, you just want us to do your homework for you. Am I supposed to believe that you had read this article about whether an emergency order is justified, but didn't bother to do anything to understand the underlying case? I know that isn't true because you did comment on other articles that do answer your question, such as this one:
https://reason.com/volokh/2025/01/23/debating-birthright-citizenship-again/?comments=true#comments
They might possibly lose 8-1. But I wouldn’t bet a lot on it not being 9-0.
I'm not seeing the emergency here, either.
As I said in another thread, if the President gets to say when there's an emergency for purposes of moving troops around, surely the judiciary get to say when there's an emergency for purposes of scheduling hearings.
How does changing a 250 year old understanding by executive order warrant expedited review?
If there's a hurry, congress could change the law in a week.
Well, it would still be unconstitutional as contrary to the 14th Amdt, but at least the underlying procedure would have been in accordance with the constitution.
As opposed to what Trump is trying to do, which is to implement and unconstitutional provision in an unconstitutional manner.
A good example of the confusion and ignorance that basically fuels all opposition to the President’s EO.
1. Why in your opinion is expedited review justified? What's the emergency?
2. Why do you think that Trump will succeed on the merits?
The plaintiffs have no standing and are NOT likely to succeed on the merits and the district judge erred in rushing to give them injunctive relief. An injunction that is interfering with ability of the duly elected president to implement his policy. If the judge wants to pursue his preferred national policies, he should resign from the bench run for the presidency.
As I asked, why do you think that Trump will succeed on the merits?
And are you aware that the Executive does not have the unlimited ability to implement the policies he favours, nor rewrite the Constitution to fit his policies?
It seems I've engaged in this back and forth quite a few times. Every week there's a new post (or 2 or 3) whining about the President's order. Then I point out that historical practice, the text of the amendment, and the actual holding of Wong Kim Ark support President Trump. And then the rants and childish insults. Now I can appreciate a witty insult but the material here frankly is grade school level. Not worth the effort anymore to seriously engage with you clowns. Not that I won't mock you, just no point in trying to have an adult exchange of ideas.
Then I point out that historical practice, the text of the amendment, and the actual holding of Wong Kim Ark support President Trump.
(d) none of the above.
If you were right, there'd be no need for the EO in the first place.
Maybe that makes sense in some alternate universe with a different understanding of logic. Not so much in this plane of reality. The immigration system has been administratively mismanaged. It can be administratively corrected.
And why does that create an emergency? Judicial orders against political branches usually interfere with somebody’s ability to implement his policy. So? Other than the fact this particular President has less patience than an average kindergartner and a greater sense of I-want-it-now self-importance than Willy Wonka’s Veronica, what makes this case any different from all the other appeals from court orders against political officials?
If a president wants to implement his policy, he should run for Congress.
"If there's a hurry, congress could change the law in a week."
No, it can't. That is one function of a constitutional amendment.
I think non-urgency works both ways. If the panel wanted to stay the order it could say a few weeks' delay in processing SSN and passport applications is not important. They already take weeks to process. For the states relying on federal funding for standing the relevant time frame is years.
Yes. Citizenship is probably not going to be revoked for anyone. So it would be better to withhold citizenship, while the issue is pending.
1. That’s not the harm being asserted in this case.
2. As the order (not the concurrence) notes, someone seeking a stay must show a strong likelihood of success on the merits, which the government hasn’t done (and can’t, since the Supreme Court has said that their position is wrong).
The post says the District Court issued a preliminary injunction, which is presumably in advance of battle on the merits.
So the effect is that the plaintiffs have won, and the defendants have lost, while the merits are uncertain.
So why does the preliminary injunction win and the emergency relief fail ? Is it something to do with immediate harm to the plaintiffs and lack thereof to the defendant ? Or a preliminary view of the merits ? Or that the lower court has a lower threshold than the higher ? Or what ?
it could say a few weeks' delay in processing SSN and passport applications is not important.
It could say that, but it would be lying. Plenty of people need to get their passports fairly quickly - either because of their own procrastination or because of unexpected events. Others may apply in what seems to be enough time but suddenly isn't.
I think you all are missing the main point here on why it's an emergency for the plaintiffs.
It has nothing to do with travel plans, SSN cards, passports. It's about the baby not being legally in the US.
Without the TRO, the administration would have authority to start deporting newborns immediately on the effective date of the executive order.
Have y'all forgotten that eventually getting to deportation is the whole reason for this executive order?
Why would this be an emergency for the plaintiffs ? They're states - the only time they might care whether a body has been deported or not is when the next census comes round. That emergency is 5 years away.
Even if the census was the only concern, the bodies will already be long gone by that time, and it will not be practical or economical to get them back. But they lawsuit lists half a dozen other programs the states say they will lose money on.
And why would money be an inadequate remedy as and when they win the case ?
Don't bother - I'm happy to remain mystified.
You can contest deportation on the grounds that you are a citizen.
Judge Forrest's concurrence is a pleasure to read. Relatively clear, relatively short, and above all thoughtful (particularly considering the short timeframe for writing it). I know nothing about her except that she is on the Ninth and was a Trump appointee; this opinion is a good sign.
That said, I think her opinion does have a salient agenda: it is probably intended as something of a shot across the bow of the new emergency relief paradigm that emerged last year (first in Kavanaugh's Labrador v. Poe concurrence, then enshrined into precedent in Ohio v. EPA) that very often the resolution of requests for emergency relief is ultimately focused "on the merits and the question who is likely to prevail" (quoting majority in Ohio v. EPA). The new paradigm's strong focus on the merits question has been criticized as a somewhat myopic turn away from the common law, and Forrest's concurrence is therefore striking in making the case for deciding a request for emergency relief without any reference to the merits whatsoever. (It even cites a Labrador v. Poe dissent, rather than the majority.)
The Labrador/EPA approach and Forrest's concurrence presumably can be sort-of reconciled by resort to the fact that the merits-focused emergency relief approach is, as we are told in Ohio v. EPA, appropriate when "each side has strong arguments about the harms they face and equities involved," and here, Forrest essentially argues, that criterion is not satisfied. But Forrest's point is clear enough: notwithstanding the merits-über alles tone of Ohio v. EPA and especially Kavanaugh's Labrador concurrence, she is of the view that when an emergency relief request is decided by a different bench than will ultimately decide the case -- here, a motions panel instead of the future merits panel -- it is better to decide the emergency relief request on other grounds when possible, without resorting to preliminarily, and necessarily hastily, addressing the merits.
I was going to post much the same thing. Fortunately, I read through the thread first. I think this concurrence is extraordinarily well-written. Concise, free of legal jargon enough so that any layperson can read and understand the reasoning. An impressive job. Trump doesn't appoint only hacks like Aileen Cannon...this is indeed an impressive judge.
+1
The 14th amendment constitutional question can be avoided entirely if the president were to issue an executive order that forbids the registration of birth, and the issuance of a birth certificate, to any person born to parents who are in the country illegally.
Since the parents are undocumented, any child born to them will be undocumented as well, and cannot pretend to any right to citizenship, since that person will have no proof of US birth or legality in the country.
By denying the registration of birth and the issuance of a birth certificate, children born to foreign nationals illegally in the US without US-issued documentation can only be regarded as foreign citizens that are, also, illegally in the US.
Birth registration and certification for a child born to parents in the country illegally can be obtained from the embassy or consulate of the nation of which the parents are citizens.
Good idea. Or maybe issue something that looks like a birth certification, but titled as a deportation order or an alien jurisdiction certificate.
That would not, of course, avoid the fourteenth amendment question.
There is a lot wrong with what you just said.
1. You're confusing the fact of citizenship with the documentation of citizenship. If I went down to the courthouse and deleted your birth record, then came to your house and destroyed your passport, you would still be a US citizen.
2. You're reversing burden of proof. The government has to prove you're not a citizen, not the other way around.
3. The president has no authority over birth certificates, except maybe in DC or a territory. State and local officials issue birth certificates. They are not part of his executive branch, they do no report to him directly or indirectly, and he can't fire them. Even Trump knew that, which is why his executive order is about SSN cards and passports.
4. That's all distinct from and in addition to the 14th Amendment violation.
Charlie is just kidding (I think. Or, maybe trolling???) Obviously, not a serious alternative to actually try.
On the other hand; this is Trump we're talking about. If he can blame Ukraine for Russia invading it, then why not try something crackpot like Charlie's tongue-in-cheek suggestion?
Yikes! I was born in DC. Maybe better shut up about Trump right now, before he sends some Musk kid to disappear my birth record.
If you went down to the courthouse and deleted my birth record, then came to my house and destroyed my passport, I would, hypothetically, still be a US citizen … but, not really. Perhaps in some mystical, metaphysical sense, but not legally.
Citizenship is a legal status utterly dependent on documentation. Without documentation, there is no basis to assert or assume anything.
The government does not have to prove that one is not a citizen (the difficulty of proving a negative). The government can simply demand documentation of citizenship, and in the absence of that, it would have no reason to assume that one is a citizen.
Your third point is true, but with a cooperative state, the state can deny a birth certificate, thus triggering a lawsuit to eventually overturn United States v. Wong Kim Ark.
1) That would not in fact avoid any constitutional question.
2) It would, however, create another one, since the president cannot issue an executive order to state governments — the governments that actually issue birth certificates.
3) Refusing to issue birth certificates would not in fact mean that there was no proof of birth.
4) Not having a birth certificate does not in fact make one illegal.
Other than that, great comment!
I'm not sure what Trump's lawyers' strategy is here, because his EO will most likely fail because of the wording of the 14th amendment. But, his lawyers may be setting up an appeal that would seek to overturn United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898), a 126-year-old decision open to reinterpretation if a majority finds grounds, and put an end to "birth tourism."
Or, if a state were to deny a birth certificate to the child of an illegal or undocumented foreigner, thus, triggering a lawsuit, this also could allow an opportunity to overturn United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898) after a series of appeals.
Things have changed a lot since 1898, and the current situation of unlawful immigration and of "birth tourism" was likely not something the authors of the 14th amendment could have anticipated.