Does the United States of America have the right to decide who walks across its border? For most Americans — the kind who lock their doors at night and don’t apologize for it — the answer is painfully obvious. Yet for years, activist federal judges have treated that foundational principle as a suggestion. A nice idea, maybe, but negotiable.
The deeper battle was never about one policy or one president. It’s about whether the words Congress writes into law actually carry meaning, or whether unelected judges get to reinvent them whenever it suits their ideology. This week, the highest court in the land weighed in. And it wasn’t close.
From SCOTUSblog:
The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld the federal government’s policy of systematically turning back asylum seekers before they can reach the U.S.-Mexico border. By a vote of 6-3, the justices agreed with the Trump administration in Mullin v. Al Otro Lado that the policy, which was adopted a decade ago as a response to a surge in the number of Haitian immigrants seeking asylum outside San Diego, does not violate a federal law that permits noncitizens to apply for asylum when they “arrive[] in the United States.”
Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito called the question before the court a “straightforward” one. “In ordinary speech,” he wrote, “no one would say that a person ‘arrives in’ a place—for example, a house, a city, or a country—before the person enters that place. The context in which the phrase ‘arrives in the United States’ is used in the immigration statutes at issue here supports an ordinary meaning.”
Six to three. “Straightforward.” You almost have to admire Alito’s restraint — calling it straightforward rather than blindingly obvious.
His reasoning was the kind of clarity that shouldn’t be remarkable but somehow is. The analogy he offered belongs in a hall of fame: “A running back does not arrive in the end zone when he reaches the 1-yard line.” You don’t “arrive in” a place until you’re physically inside it. Congress wrote, “arrives in the United States.” Not “arrives near.” Not “arrives at.” The statute says what it says. End of discussion.
DHS General Counsel James Percival captured the moment well: “We have yet AGAIN been vindicated by the Supreme Court. This decision opens up an important tool to continue securing our southern border.”
The Ninth Circuit gets corrected. Again.
Thursday’s ruling reversed an October 2024 decision by the Ninth Circuit — the same court that conservatives could set their watches by for reliably wrong immigration rulings. The Ninth Circuit had decided that anyone physically stopped at the border qualified as having “arrived in” the country, regardless of whether they’d actually touched U.S. soil. Creative interpretation, to put it generously.
Solicitor General Sauer had argued the Ninth Circuit’s logic “deprives the Executive Branch of a critical tool for addressing border surges.” Justice Thomas went a step further in his concurrence, writing that Congress simply doesn’t have the constitutional authority to force the president to “allow aliens to cross the border against his will.” Not a radical proposition. Just an honest reading of the separation of powers.
Feelings aren’t statutes
Justice Sotomayor, unsurprisingly, opted for drama over doctrine. She invoked the M.S. St. Louis — a ship carrying Jewish refugees turned away during the Nazi era — to compare modern border management with Holocaust atrocities. Let that comparison sit for a moment. An orderly queue-management system at a port of entry is apparently equivalent to sending people back to genocide.
Alito took the unusual step of responding directly from the bench. He pointed out that the metering policy was deployed by both the Obama and Trump administrations as an “orderly and humane” method of handling surges. Not exactly the stuff of historical villainy.
The road ahead
Let’s be precise about what this ruling does and doesn’t do. It doesn’t ban asylum. It doesn’t seal the border shut. It affirms that the federal government can manage the flow of people at official crossings without being sued into paralysis. Every functioning nation on the planet does this.
For too long, courts have substituted progressive wish-lists for the plain text of the law. Thursday’s decision is a corrective — a reminder that when judges respect the language Congress actually wrote, the system works the way it was designed to. The border belongs to the American people. The Supreme Court just put that in writing.
Key Takeaways
- The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that border agents can lawfully turn back asylum seekers still on Mexican soil.
- Justice Alito’s majority opinion reinforces that statutory language means exactly what it says.
- The Ninth Circuit was overturned yet again, reaffirming executive authority over border management.
- This ruling restores a bipartisan tool first implemented under Obama to manage border surges.
Sources: SCOTUSblog, NBC News
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