U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Remain in Mexico Policy
Despite rulings from lower courts that the policy is more than likely illegal in nature, the United States Supreme Court has ruled that the Trump administration will be allowed to continue to enforce a policy that mandates asylum seekers wait in Mexico for U.S. court hearings. The “Remain in Mexico” policy will remain in effect while a lawsuit currently challenging it goes through the courts, which will likely last at least through the end of President Donald Trump’s current term in January 2021. The order from the justices overturns a lower court order that would have otherwise blocked the “Remain in Mexico” policy for those arriving at border crossings in the states of California and Arizona, which was scheduled to take effect in just days. Justice Sonia Sotomayor dissented. The Trump administration is now expected to file a formal appeal with the Supreme Court; however, it’s expected that the justices will not consider such an appeal until the fall, and in the event the case is granted a full review, arguments likely would not be held until early 2021. This latest ruling is one of many of the justices siding with President Trump in order to permit his immigration policies to continue after lower courts had issued rulings to stop them. Other similar cases