logo
How Trump calling immigration an ‘invasion' could help him stretch the law

How Trump calling immigration an ‘invasion' could help him stretch the law

Yahoo31-01-2025

No longer just campaign trail rhetoric, President Donald Trump's insistence that immigration to the United States amounts to an 'invasion' may be critical to unlocking extraordinary powers as the administration carries out his deportation agenda.
Multiple executive orders and agency memos use the word 'invasion' to describe why Trump is taking actions that tighten the US border, empower state and local officials to carry out immigration enforcement, and take a more aggressive approach to detaining and deporting migrants.
Some orders signed by Trump last week use 'Invasion' in their titles, and one proclamation is built specifically around a constitutional provision that says the federal government is obligated to protect the states 'against invasion.' In another early action, Trump issued a national emergency declaration the described an 'invasion' at the border that 'has caused widespread chaos and suffering in our country over the last 4 years.'
The word choice is intentional.
Legal experts believe the administration could try to rely on the invasion rationale to justify possible future actions that would go beyond the limits of immigration law and that would ignore the procedures in place for border-crossers.
'The invasion point comes in here, because the most basic and longstanding purpose to having a military is to stop people from invading your country. And that's what's happening at the southern border,' said Ken Cuccinelli, who served as the acting deputy secretary of Homeland Security in the first Trump administration. 'The president doesn't need anything beyond his commander in chief authority to block people from crossing the border illegally.'
It also previews how the Justice Department will defend his immigration agenda in court, hoping to capitalize on how courts have historically deferred to a president's actions in instances of a national emergency.
'He is trying to invoke a fiction in order to increase the power of the president in ways that are completely inapplicable to this situation,' said Lucas Guttentag, a Stanford Law professor who founded the American Civil Liberties Union's Immigrants' Rights Project and who served in top roles in Democratic administration.
The language harkens to constitutional provisions that give federal government and states special powers in times of invasion. The possible invocation of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act is also hanging over how Trump's anti-immigration agenda is being framed so far. That law, which Trump touted on the campaign trail, allows the federal government to depart from the usual procedures for detentions and deportations in a time of 'Invasion or predatory incursion.'
'We are not there yet,' said Steve Vladeck, a CNN Supreme Court analyst and Georgetown University Law Center professor, but, 'we may well be in for a very, very big, pitched legal battle over whether there really is an invasion along the southern border and what the legal consequences are of that are.'
In a statement, White House spokesperson Kush Desai said that 'tens of millions of unvetted illegal migrants and literal tons of illicit drugs like fentanyl and methamphetamine poured over the southern border into American communities over the last four years.'
'That is an invasion, and the American people recognize that this the reality – that's why they delivered a resounding mandate to President Trump to secure our border and communities,' Desai said.
The embrace of the invasion idea picks up on claims that states like Texas were making in legal disputes with the Biden administration over what role they could play in policing the border.
In addition to the Constitution's guarantee that the federal government shall protect states from invasion, another provision allows states to engage in war when they are 'actually invaded.'
'When you put those two things together, what do you get?' said Joshua Blackman, a professor at South Texas College of Law. 'If a president declares an invasion, a state can engage in war.'
The argument could allow states to take actions that federal law would normally foreclose, Blackman said, but the proposition will have to be tested in court.
'It's significant constitutional power that hasn't really been discussed at all,' Blackman said.
The administration has emphasized it's looking for help from the states in its efforts to arrest and detain undocumented immigrants. Last week, then-acting Homeland Security Secretary released a memo, pivoting off of Trump's invasion-oriented executive orders, that made a finding of a 'mass influx' of migrants to trigger new state authorities for immigration enforcement.
According to Vladeck, the administration's use of such language gives 'cover' to state officials like Texas Gov. Greg Abbott who have sought for their states to take a more direct role in immigration enforcement.
Texas, for instance, has used the 'invasion' rationale in court to defend a state law, challenged by the Biden administration, that allows state officials to arrest and detain people suspected of entering the country illegally.
Legal experts see the invasion motif as a signal for powers that Trump administration may seek to exercise to take his anti-immigration agenda even further and to potentially try to overcome laws imposed by Congress that traditionally dictate border policy.
Ilya Somin, a professor of law at George Mason University, pointed to past instances where courts struck down attempts to end all asylum procedures at the border, concluding such moves as violations of the Refugee Act.
'Part of the purpose of the invasion argument is they say, 'Well, that overrides statutory constraints that Congress might otherwise put in place,'' Somin said.
The invasion language could also be 'setting the stage' for invocation of the Alien Enemies Act, Vladeck said, referring to the 1798 statute last used during World War II that would let the government eschew the due process protections afforded to immigrants before they can be deported.
The law was referenced in a Trump executive order last week that designated cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.
Already, Trump is repeating a playbook he used in his first administration to get around the congressional appropriations process. With another measure signed last week, Trump declared a national emergency at the border, in effort to direct military resources towards border security. Trump faced lawsuits when he used a similar maneuver during his first term to funnel Defense Department funding towards building a border wall.
Courts may be more willing to defer to this kind of gambit than other Trump efforts to get around federal law, said Matthew Lindsay, a University of Baltimore School of Law professor. He noted, however, that the immigration crisis is not what it was 2023 in, as the numbers of border crossing have dropped considerably since that highpoint.
'Lurking behind this, there is a real separation of powers question about what extent courts are going to be keeping Congress involved in the types of appropriations decisions Congress passes,' he said.
A key question underlying Trump's strategy will be whether courts believe they can review a president's determination that an influx of migrants can qualify as an 'invasion' or if they see that as the type of 'political question' they have no power to decide.
If they chose the latter course, 'that would give the president a blank check to declare an invasion pretty much anytime he wants, and then use that to suspend everyone's civil liberties,' Somin said.
One prominent judge has recently floated the idea. In a 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals ruling last summer siding with Texas in a dispute with the Biden administration over buoys the state placed in the Rio Grande, Judge James Ho wrote a partial dissent that seemed to embrace an invasion justification being put forward by the state, while describing the invasion determination as a political question that was not up courts to decide.
'Ho is the only federal judge, of the ones who have considered the issue, to have to some extent, at least, endorsed the invasion argument,' Somin said. 'Everyone else has rejected it.'
Ho, seen as on the shortlist for possible Supreme Court nominees if Trump is given an opening on the high court, also recently floated the invasion idea as a possible exception to the principle of birthright citizenship, which Trump is trying to end for children born to undocumented immigrants or temporary visa holders.
Supporters of Trump's agenda are confident courts will defer to his determination that an invasion is occurring at the southern border. Other legal experts who are more skeptical say the context in which he is making the argument will likely matter a great deal.
'It may just depend on their appetite for just standing by and allowing the administration to accumulate these instances of unchecked authority,' Lindsay said.
CNN's Priscilla Alavarez contributed to this report.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russian drones and missiles target Ukrainian city of Kharkiv
Russian drones and missiles target Ukrainian city of Kharkiv

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Russian drones and missiles target Ukrainian city of Kharkiv

A large Russian drone and missile attack has targeted the city of Kharkiv in Ukraine, killing at least three people and injuring 21, local Ukrainian officials said. The Russian barrage – the latest in near daily widescale attacks by Moscow – included deadly aerial glide bombs that have become part of fierce Russian attacks in the three-year war. Kharkiv's mayor Ihor Terekhov said the attack also damaged 18 blocks of flats and 13 private homes. Citing preliminary data, he said Russia used 48 Shahed drones, two missiles and four aerial glide bombs in the attack. The intensity of the Russian attacks on Ukraine over the past weeks has further dampened hopes that the warring sides could reach a peace deal soon – especially after Kyiv recently embarrassed the Kremlin with a surprising drone attack on military airfields deep inside Russia. The attack also came after US President Donald Trump said his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, told him Moscow would respond to Ukraine's attack on Sunday on Russian military airfields. It was also hours after Mr Trump said it might be better to let Ukraine and Russia 'fight for a while' before pulling them apart and pursuing peace. Mr Trump's comments were a remarkable detour from his often-stated appeals to stop the war and signalled he may be giving up on recent peace efforts.

Russia won't let Ukrainian forces rest until Putin's demands are met – Russian deputy foreign minister
Russia won't let Ukrainian forces rest until Putin's demands are met – Russian deputy foreign minister

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Russia won't let Ukrainian forces rest until Putin's demands are met – Russian deputy foreign minister

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov has stated that Moscow will not allow the Armed Forces of Ukraine to "use any pause to rest and regroup" without "eliminating the root causes of the conflict". Source: Ryabkov in an interview with Kremlin-aligned Russian news agency TASS Details: Ryabkov emphasised that US President Donald Trump's return to the White House has become a "reason for cautious optimism" in Russia regarding the normalisation of relations with the United States. He said that Russian leader Vladimir Putin during phone conversations with Trump "confirmed the basic directive on the necessity to eliminate the root causes of the conflict within the framework of political and diplomatic efforts". Ryabkov noted that if the Kremlin's conditions are not met, Russia will act to prevent the Armed Forces of Ukraine from taking advantage of "any pause to rest and regroup". According to him, the Kremlin's position is well known to Washington and threats of sanctions will not change it. "It is strange that hotheads in the US Senate, who have lost their last remnants of common sense, are ignoring this reality. We will continue efforts to achieve the objectives of the special military operation [Russian propaganda term for the war in Ukraine – ed.]. Thus, the decision and the choice are up to Washington, up to Trump," Ryabkov concluded. Background: On 3 June, Dmitry Medvedev, Deputy Chairman of Russia's Security Council and former president of the Russian Federation, declared that the true purpose of the so-called peace talks with Ukraine in Istanbul is to ensure Russia's swift and complete victory. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!

West Wing Civil War Erupts Over Who Caused Trump-Musk Explosion
West Wing Civil War Erupts Over Who Caused Trump-Musk Explosion

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

West Wing Civil War Erupts Over Who Caused Trump-Musk Explosion

A top White House aide nursing a grudge against Elon Musk is being partly blamed for igniting President Donald Trump's war with the Tesla CEO. Sergio Gor, the White House director of presidential personnel, urged Trump to rescind his nomination for Musk's personal friend Jared Isaacman to lead NASA, sparking a rift between the president and the world's richest man that erupted in public Thursday, the New York Post reported. 'The NASA guy was the straw that broke the camel's back,' a White House source told the Post, suggesting that Gor wanted 'to bury the knife in [Musk's] back.' Four sources inside or close to the White House told the outlet that Gor, 38, has been holding a grudge against Musk, 53, ever since the billionaire 'humiliated' him in front of the Trump Cabinet for not moving fast enough on staffing the administration. 'Sergio was upset about Elon dressing him down at the meeting and said he was going to 'get him,'' another source said. '[Pulling Isaacman's nomination] was the modern-day equivalent of the assassination of Franz Ferdinand. Sure, Sergio got a scalp, but what did POTUS get?' Gor reportedly developed a deep personal dislike of Musk while the tech mogul was still on friendly terms with Trump, and gleefully celebrated dips in Musk's wealth when Tesla stock plunged, according to three of the sources. 'He'd go around showing Tesla stock prices going down and laugh about it,' one White House source told the Post. The outlet said Gor denied taking pleasure in Tesla's falling stock or ever seeking revenge against Musk. Former Trump strategist Steve Bannon backed up Gor, saying the Trump-Musk feud had been simmering for months over issues like Musk's opposition to Trump's tariff strategy. 'Did Elon have a problem with Sergio?' Bannon, a longtime Musk antagonist told the Post. 'Yes, the fact that we are not hiring enough—guess what—liberal f---ing progressive Democrats.' He argued Trump engaged in the bitter spat because he's 'upset' over Musk's failure to deliver significant savings at DOGE and his reported drug use. Yet, Trump and Musk heaped praise on each other at a congenial send-off last Friday, following the conclusion of Musk's term as a special advisor. It wasn't until Trump withdrew Isaacman's nomination shortly after Musk—his biggest financial backer in 2024—left the White House, that the billionaire launched a sharp attack on the president's cherished 'Big, Beautiful Bill,' calling it a 'disgusting abomination' in an X post on Tuesday. The Trump administration has cited Isaacman's past donations to Democrats as the reason for Trump rescinding his nomination just days before his Senate confirmation. But Isaacman, another billionaire in Trumpworld, questioned that explanation, noting his donations have long been public knowledge. 'I don't blame an influential adviser coming in and saying, 'Look, here's the facts, and I think we should kill this guy,'' Isaacman said on the All-In podcast Wednesday. 'And the president's got to make a call and move on.' For now, it seems the administration is sticking with Gor. The Post said that White House Communications Director Steven Cheung called Gor 'a vital member of the team and he has helped President Trump put together an administration that is second to none.' One source close to the White House speculated, however, that Gor could become the fall guy and help mend the Trump-Musk relationship—if Musk can be convinced that the president was merely being 'played' by Gor.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store