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Revised and Updated Version of My Article "Immigration is Not Invasion"
It is now available on SSRN. The revision adds additional evidence, and takes account of various recent events, including Trump's military intervention in Venezuela.

A revised and updated version of my article "Immigration is Not Invasion" now up on SSRN and can be downloaded for free. It adds more historical evidence on the meaning of "invasion" in the Constitution and the Alien Enemies Act. It also addresses recent events, such as Trump's declaration that fentanyl is a WMD, and his military intervention in Venezuela to seize that country's dictator, Nicolas Maduro. None of these actions convert illegal migration or drug smuggling into an "invasion" of the US, and many of them are themselves illegal. These actions are covered in Part III of the article.
Law journal editors may be interested to know that I will be submitting this article for publication in the spring semester submission cycle.
Here is the updated abstract:
In recent years, state governments and the second Trump Administration have increasingly advanced the argument that illegal migration and cross-border drug-smuggling qualify as "invasion" under the Constitution, and the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 (AEA). If these arguments are accepted by courts, or if they rule the issue is committed to the unreviewable discretion of the executive, the consequences will be dire. Such an outcome would pose a grave threat to the civil liberties of both immigrants and US citizens. It would also enable state governments to initiate war without federal authorization. This article makes the first comprehensive case against claims that illegal migration and drug smuggling qualify as "invasion." As James Madison explained in 1800, "Invasion is an operation of war." Illegal migration and drug smuggling do not qualify.
Part I summarizes the history of the "invasion" debate and currently ongoing litigation over it. Part II explains why the broad interpretation of "invasion" is manifestly wrong under the text and original meaning of the Constitution. The concept does not include illegal migration or drug smuggling. This conclusion is supported by the constitutional text, extensive evidence from the Constitutional Convention and the ratification process, and references to "invasion" in the Federalist Papers.
In Part III, I consider the meaning of "invasion" in the Alien Enemies Act of 1798. The text and public meaning indicate it is essentially the same as that in the Constitution. Under the Act, an invasion requires a military attack. This reality is not changed by the fact that many Americans die as a result of overdosing on illegal drugs, or by recent US military attacks on suspected drug smugglers in international waters. The more recent US military intervention in Venezuela also cannot be used to justify invocation of the AEA.
Part IV outlines the dire implications of the broad view of invasion. State governments would have the power to wage war in response to undocumented migration and smuggling, even if such warfare were not authorized by Congress. This would be a major undermining of Congress' power to declare war and threatens to involve the United States in warfare at the behest of a single state government. Even worse, the broad view would also effectively give the federal government the power to suspend the writ of habeas corpus at any time. These dangerous implications strengthen the originalist case against a broad definition of "invasion." They also cut against the broad definition from the standpoint of various living constitution theories of interpretation.
Finally, Part V explains why courts should not defer to the president or to state governments on either the meaning of "invasion" or the factual issue of whether an "invasion" – properly defined – has actually occurred.
The earlier version of this article got the coveted "Highly Recommended" rating from Prof. Larry Solum (University of Virginia) at his Legal Theory Blog.
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