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Read Sonya Sotomayor’s “Blistering” Dissent On Asylum Rules
Hotair ^ | 09/12/2019 | Jazz Shaw

Posted on 09/12/2019 8:09:22 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

John Sexton wrote last night about yesterday’s Supreme Court decision on the White House’s new asylum rules. By a seven to two margin, the justices agreed that the rule, which essentially acts as a safe third country agreement (without Mexico’s participation) could remain in effect while the case continued through the appeals process.

The two dissenting justices were Sotomayor and Ginsburg, with the former writing the dissent. As Newsweek points out, Sotomayor was rather blunt in her objections, but I can’t help wondering precisely what it was she was objecting to.

Once again the Executive Branch has issued a rule that seeks to upend longstanding practices regarding refugees who seek shelter from persecution,” Sotomayor wrote in her dissenting opinion. “Although this Nation has long kept its doors open to refugees — and although the stakes for asylum seekers could not be higher — the Government implemented its rule without first providing the public notice and inviting the public input generally required by law.”

Sotomayor also slammed the Trump administration for requesting the Supreme Court to allow the rule when lower courts ruled against the move. “Unfortunately, it appears the Government has treated this exceptional mechanism as a new normal,” she wrote. “Historically, the Government has made this kind of request rarely; now it does so reflexively.”

“This is an extraordinary request,” Sotomayor continued. “Unfortunately, the Court acquiesces. Because I do not believe the Government has met its weighty burden for such relief, I would deny the stay.”

Okay, I suppose that qualifies as “scathing,” at least in terms of normal SCOTUS language. But what is Sotomayor actually objecting to? Her comments about the Trump administration rushing the rule through without having a period for public comment speak to normal practices. But the President has declared an emergency on the southern border, so some of the usual rules won’t apply. (And how often do the words “normal” and Donald Trump collide in the same sentence anyway?) The point is, she cast her vote based, in part, on tradition rather than law.

Her other objection was in response to the fact that the White House asked the Supremes to let them jump to the head of the line and rule on this before the question had finished making its way through the lower courts where the policy had been blocked. As with the previous point, is she suggesting that the White House can’t (or shouldn’t) make such a request under the law? The fact is that such requests may come along infrequently, but it does happen. And the court has agreed to them in the past.

While this may be a deviation from the normal course of judicial review (a point that CNN was screaming from the rooftops when I woke up this morning), it’s also part of the accepted process when time is of the essence. Nobody forced them to take the case early. That was their decision, and seven justices apparently saw it the President’s way. And let’s not forget that they were reversing the Ninth Circuit once again. You could get the Ninth Circuit to ban Trump from eating breakfast if you wrote a mildly coherent brief.

With that bit of unpleasantness in the rearview mirror, I think the White House needs to clarify a few things about this new policy for us. One of the big questions involves what happens to people showing up at the border and requesting asylum without having applied for it in Mexico first. Previously they would have fallen under the “Remain in Mexico” policy while their case was heard, but now they’ll just be disqualified. Can they then go back and ask Mexico for asylum or would they be immediately deported back to their home country? All of these changes are complicating the procedures that will have to be followed by border security officials. And it gives you the sense that mistakes will probably be made.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: asylum; dissent; scotus; sotomayor
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To: SeekAndFind

Asylum Laws are still in effect- basically meaning 1) one applies for asylum from a menu of reasons at a US Embassy or consulate in a foreign country, 2) then they are either approved or denied, and 3) then they come to the US....

The left thinks that the cart before the horsey thing works for everything.


41 posted on 09/12/2019 9:28:23 AM PDT by Manly Warrior (US ARMY (Ret), "No Free Lunches for the Dogs of War")
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To: SeekAndFind
the Government implemented its rule without first providing the public notice and inviting the public input

She's kidding, right?

What constitutes "public input" in this case? The fact that Congress has repeatedly debated and not passed immigration reforms? The turnout at Trump rallies? The fact that Trump was elected over Clinton?

What is Sotomayor waiting for? Is the only valid "public opinion" a successful bill from Congress that goes her way? A Democrat winning the White House? Something else?

-PJ

42 posted on 09/12/2019 9:45:04 AM PDT by Political Junkie Too (The 1st Amendment gives the People the right to a free press, not CNN the right to the 1st question.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Judges should be allowed to make law when they don’t like the current law. I get it.


43 posted on 09/12/2019 9:47:37 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Judges should be allowed to make law when they don’t like the current law. I get it.


44 posted on 09/12/2019 9:47:40 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: SeekAndFind
refugees who seek shelter from persecution

that's the democrat talking point, it's a lie. They know it and we all know it. Not surprising coming from an Obozo appointee.

45 posted on 09/12/2019 9:53:08 AM PDT by drypowder
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To: LeonardFMason
She SHOULD be embarrassed by this dissent. It doesn’t even meet the incoherent drivel standard.

Authentic Frontier Gibberish?

46 posted on 09/12/2019 9:53:25 AM PDT by BlackbirdSST (Is it time Claire?)
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To: SeekAndFind

This is what happens when you put Manuel Noriega on the U.S. Supreme Court.


47 posted on 09/12/2019 9:54:47 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("Knowledge makes a man unfit to be a slave." -- Frederick Douglass)
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To: SeekAndFind

She’s an activist, not a Jurist... the only upside to her being on the court is her health issues will make sure she’s not going to be another Ginsburg.


48 posted on 09/12/2019 9:55:55 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: SeekAndFind

Who wants to read this?


49 posted on 09/12/2019 10:00:03 AM PDT by Maris Crane
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To: MplsSteve
I’m surprised Kagan and Breyer voted in the affirmative on this ruling.

At one time I would have been, but I read a surprisingly frank article here on FR a few years ago about the large number of 8-1 and 9-0 decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court that never make the news.

Apparently, SCOTUS cases that involve rulings on the proper role and authority among the branches of the U.S. government tends to draw a strong consensus among the justices. Interestingly, a 7-2 ruling in a case like this is unusually close.

50 posted on 09/12/2019 10:00:29 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("Knowledge makes a man unfit to be a slave." -- Frederick Douglass)
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To: yoe
I don't imagine Sotomayor would mind the detention of illegal applicant until the matter is settled

So that the illegals could flood the borders and overwhelm the system. Then the Rats could decry the horrible conditions of their detainment.

51 posted on 09/12/2019 10:13:27 AM PDT by Jeff Chandler (This Space For Rant)
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To: reasonisfaith

(are you absolutely sure?)


52 posted on 09/12/2019 10:29:34 AM PDT by txnativegop (The political left, Mankinds intellectual hemlock)
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To: bk1000

I guess she really is that stupid!


53 posted on 09/12/2019 10:30:42 AM PDT by txnativegop (The political left, Mankinds intellectual hemlock)
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To: Manly Warrior

I thought this too, but apparently it is incorrect. The only time a person can apply for admission at an embassy or consulate is if they are already categorized as a refugee by some international body (this would mostly include war and disaster refugees). Even then, this is an application for resettlement rather than asylum itself. Regular applications for asylum can only be made once a person is on US territory.


54 posted on 09/12/2019 10:51:55 AM PDT by billakay
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To: SeekAndFind

The worthless pussy republican senators should have give this piece or legal horse crap the Bork treatment when they were discussing her sorry ass.
Instead they played nice and bent over back words to make fools of themselves by kissing the backside then overwhelmingly voted for her for the supremes.
I wouldn’t hire this vermin pick up my dog poop


55 posted on 09/12/2019 11:43:29 AM PDT by Joe Boucher ( Molon Labe' baby, Molon Labe)
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To: SeekAndFind
re: "Once again the Executive Branch has issued a rule that seeks to upend longstanding practices regarding refugees who seek shelter from persecution"

So what. What does our written law have to say on this?

56 posted on 09/12/2019 11:52:34 AM PDT by _Jim (Save babies)
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To: SeekAndFind
"One of the big questions involves what happens to people showing up at the border and requesting asylum without having applied for it in Mexico first."

Well...Mexico establishes an agent there with the authority to say no to their asylum request. Then they proceed into the USA.

What's changed?

57 posted on 09/12/2019 12:09:46 PM PDT by Savage Beast (Was the election of Donald Trump to the Presidency liberty's last gasp? Big Brother is watching you.)
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To: ObozoMustGo2012; SeekAndFind
"...a rule that seeks to upend longstanding practices regarding refugees who seek shelter from persecution,..."

A few questions...

  1. How "long" is the "longstanding" in this case? Does it extend all the way back to the day the Constitution was approved?
  2. Currently, from which foreign country and which migrant invaders are at our borders because of "persecution"? Does being broke or not having two TVs qualify as being "persecuted? (Have you seen crowds of theses invaders wearing nothing but tattered rags and having no shoes? Are the migrants looking like starving remnants of the German concentration camps?) For those who are actually "persecuted", are they mostly drug dealers, murderers, or terrorists persecuted because of their criminal actions?
In fact, for the past decade, the claims/requests for "asylum" have exploded only as a result the large crowd of demoncrat congressmen and activists who have gone to Mexico or the southern border and proposed and encouraged the bogus claim of the need for asylum as a method to cheat their way into the U.S. and onto the demoncrat-voter roles...
58 posted on 09/12/2019 12:15:53 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is Sam Adams now that we desperately need him)
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To: SeekAndFind

Deport the wide latina and the racist old hag who sleeps on the job.


59 posted on 09/12/2019 2:30:47 PM PDT by utax
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To: billakay

That’s fine. The process starts in some far off place with interaction between the aggrieved person and the US, not “hi, here I am, glad I found you guys, oh me? I am applying for asylum, oh and yeah, Welfare and SSI and snap and health care; btw, do you know where I can get in state tuition too?”.....


60 posted on 09/13/2019 7:50:09 AM PDT by Manly Warrior (US ARMY (Ret), "No Free Lunches for the Dogs of War")
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