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"path": "/2026/06/26/supreme-court-immigration-law-asylum-tps/",
"publishedAt": "2026-06-26T15:07:38.000Z",
"site": "https://msmagazine.com",
"tags": [
"Global",
"Immigration",
"Justice & Law",
"National",
"Courts and Judges",
"Donald Trump and the Trump Administration",
"Elena Kagan",
"Haiti",
"Ketanji Brown Jackson",
"Middle East",
"Sonia Sotomayor",
"Supreme Court",
"With Latest Immigration Decisions, the Supreme Court’s Conservative Majority Rewrites Immigration Law, One Word at a Time",
"Ms. Magazine"
],
"textContent": "Just days after World Refugee Day, the Supreme Court issued two immigration decisions that dramatically narrow protections for asylum seekers and Temporary Protected Status holders: _Mullin v. Al Otro Lado_ and _Mullin v. Doe_.\n\nAlthough the cases address different legal questions, they share a troubling approach: The conservative majority isolates individual words from their statutory context to expand presidential authority while limiting humanitarian protections Congress intended to provide.\n\nIn one decision, the Court allows the Trump administration to revive a policy that turns away asylum seekers at the border before they can present their claims. In the other, it shields the administration's termination of TPS for hundreds of thousands of Haitians and thousands of Syrians from meaningful judicial review.\n\nPowerful dissents from Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Ketanji Brown Jackson and Elena Kagan argue that the majority ignored both the broader legal framework and the real-world consequences of its rulings.\n\nThese opinions are about far more than technical questions of statutory interpretation. By reading immigration law out of context, the Court is reshaping who can seek protection in the United States—and how much power the executive branch has to decide their fate.\n\nThe post With Latest Immigration Decisions, the Supreme Court’s Conservative Majority Rewrites Immigration Law, One Word at a Time appeared first on Ms. Magazine.",
"title": "With Latest Immigration Decisions, the Supreme Court’s Conservative Majority Rewrites Immigration Law, One Word at a Time"
}