The enormous stakes in the Supreme Court's "Remain in Mexico" case, explained
By Ian Millhiser
Elections have consequences. Or at least, they are supposed to.
When the American people voted to replace former President Donald Trump with now-President Joe Biden, that should have meant that many of Trumps policies including policies governing the US-Mexico border could be abandoned and replaced by policies supported by Democrats. That is, after all, how democratic republics work.
But, nearly a year and a half into Bidens presidency, a Trump immigration policy known as Remain in Mexico is still in effect. Its in effect despite the fact that the Biden administration has twice taken the legal steps necessary to rescind it or at least, the steps that were necessary before one of Trumps judges got involved.
The fate of this Remain in Mexico policy is now before the Supreme Court in Biden v. Texas, a case that the Court will hear on Tuesday, April 26.
Remain in Mexico is the colloquial name for Trumps Migrant Protection Protocols, which require many immigrants who seek asylum in the United States to stay in Mexico while they wait for a hearing. The Biden administration first announced that it was suspending this program in a June 1, 2021 memo from Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas.
Mayorkass June memo argued that Remain in Mexico drained limited border security resources, required diplomatic negotiations with Mexican officials that draws away from other elements that necessarily must be more central to the bilateral relationship, and forced many migrants to live in squalid conditions without stable access to housing, income, and safety.
That should have been the end of the policy, for at least as long as Biden is president. But then Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk decided to overrule Biden.
https://www.vox.com/23032702/supreme-court-remain-in-mexico-texas-biden-trump-immigration
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RepubliKKKans hate judges making laws...unless they agree with them