Update
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

Only 5 SCOTUS members believe in the Supremacy Clause

Only 5 Supreme Court Justices Believe In The Supremacy Clause And That's A Real Fricking Problem
The right wing of the Supreme Court is playing a dangerous game.
By KATHRYN RUBINO
January 23, 2024 at 3:45 PM

Last night, the Supreme Court’s shadow docket struck again. In a 5-4 decision (without any written opinion), the Court held in Department of Homeland Security v. Texas that the federal government can do their job. That may sound like a glib summary of the facts, but it isn’t inaccurate. The underlying Fifth Circuit decision, which was vacated, really allowed the state of Texas to use razor wire to stop federal agents from doing their job — specifically federal border agents were unable to approach migrants in the course of their duties thanks to the Fifth Circuit.

If you’ve given the Constitution even the most cursory of glances, you’re probably thinking OF COURSE that is the result. It should be an easy victory for the federal government. The Supremacy Clause is pretty clear, that federal law “shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby.” And there’s 80+-year-old precedent making it crystal that “the supremacy of the national power in the general field of foreign affairs, including power over immigration, naturalization and deportation, is made clear by the Constitution.”

But folks, it was 5-4 — not the 9-0 you should expect.

The truth is, despite what right-wing pundits are parroting, this is highly disturbing. The Supremacy Clause is not a controversial doctrine — it’s well-established and should have easily resulted in a decision against Texas. The fact that four justices put aside the actual Constitution in this case should tell us something. (Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Barrett joined the three liberal justices in the majority.)

And it’s something we’ve known for a minute now — at least if you’ve been paying attention. The majority of justices appointed by Republicans may have sworn they adhere to a strict judicial philosophy, bound by the original or textual understand of the underlying law, but that’s a lie. Here a true originalist or textualist would have thrown their vote with the majority, yet four so-called conservatives have ditched that in favor of their preferred policy outcome.

And the Texas Governor hasn’t taken his narrow loss particularly well — he’s openly defying the Court’s order.

The minority’s cavalier attitude towards the literal words in the Constitution has emboldened a power-hungry politician just itching to start the next Civil War. When things are, you know, testy, a unified Court (especially on such a gimmie issue) speaks volumes. There’s a reason Earl Warren held out for an unanimous Court in Brown v. Board of Ed. Otherwise everyone just thinks their own personal interpretation of the Constitution is valid, regardless of what the majority holds.

Nothing about this is going to end well.

Abovethelaw.com
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
Subsumedpat · 36-40, M
Not as simple as that, the feds by cutting the wire are assisting illegal immigrants to violate both Texas and Federal law.
JSul3 · 70-79
@Subsumedpat Entering the US illegally is a misdemeanor, not a felony.
Every person entering the US has the right to seek asylum and have their case heard in a court of law and a judge determine their fate.
Don't like the law? Go through the process to change the law.
Many corporations hire illegals for the cheap labor. Demand that they use E verify to confirm their status and heavily fine and shut down companies that do not follow the law.

I have yet to see any video evidence of any of these men, women, and children coming to the US, carrying any weapons and desiring to take over the country. What I have seen are people leaving horrific conditions in their country, seeking a better life for themselves and their loved ones.

They should have their day in court and a verdict rendered....not being subject to drowning or being caught in razor wire.

The SCOTUS has ruled on this matter and Abbott doesn't like their decision. He is defying the Supreme Court. He should be arrested.

The House Party of Trump, refuse to vote on a Senate bill that provides funding for additional border agents, and judges to hear the cases and decide their fate.

U.S. officials processed more than 302,000 migrants at and in between ports of entry along the southern border last month, an all-time high that shattered all previous records, according to official government data published Friday. Illegal border crossings have since plummeted, a trend U.S. officials have attributed to increased Mexican immigration enforcement and a historical lull after the holidays.
Subsumedpat · 36-40, M
@JSul3 Court never said that Abbott could not put up the wire nor did the court throw out the Texas state making it a state crime to cross the Texas-Mexico border between ports of entry. If they want to apply for asylum they can do it at a lawful port of entry or for that matter while still in mexico.
JSul3 · 70-79
@Subsumedpat Unfortunately many families are not close to a border crossing, so they cross where the can, and immediately surrender to border agents.
It is a humanitarian crisis, plain and simple.

On Monday, the supreme court voted 5-4 in favor of the federal government’s power to remove the controversial concertina wire installed along stretches of the border in Texas, at Abbott’s direction. Despite this, Abbott, a hard-right Republican, is intensifying his plans to try to fence off parts of the US border with Mexico.

Federal agents were given further confirmation this week at the supreme court that they may remove the razor wire, as the enforcement of immigration law is under federal jurisdiction. But Abbott has argued there was nothing preventing him from ordering the Texas national guard to continue laying more razor wire. The national guard is ultimately part of the US military, overseen by the US president as commander-in chief, but except in specific situations where the president explicitly takes federal control, the national guard in each state takes orders from its state governor.

Immigration matters, as confirmed in the 2012 supreme court case Arizona v United States, officially fall under the federal government – not individual states. Abbott has repeatedly invoked the invasion clause, essentially as a loophole, in the US and Texas constitutions, likening migrants to a public foreign enemy, which gives him the right to enforce border security and immigration matters, he argues.

Fatma Marouf, a law professor and the director of the immigrant rights clinic at Texas A&M University’s School of Law said Abbott’s decision to lay more wire down “seems to defy the purpose of the supreme court’s order”.
Subsumedpat · 36-40, M
@JSul3 The supreme court could have enjoined Abbott from putting down more but they choose not to.

You argue they might not live close to a crossing yet they walked across multiple countries to get to the border.
JSul3 · 70-79
@Subsumedpat Desperate people do desperate things.
You might do the same were you in their shoes.