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Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Why are Thomas and Alito still on the Supreme Court?


A Dissent Worthy of “Truth” Social
Mitchell Zimmerman

 


The United States Supreme Court issued an order early morning on April 19 that responded decisively
 to President Trump’s latest effort to rush immigrants out of the U.S. and into a notorious El Salvadoran prison before anyone has time to react. The high court’s answer: No, you shall not.

But Justices Alito and Thomas have filed a dissent that says in substance: Sure, go for it, Donald – nothing urgent here.

The dissent is worth examining because it makes plain that in the emerging confrontation between a judiciary determined to maintain a commitment to due process of law and an executive who openly claims unrestrained power, Alito and Thomas are eager to abandon constitutional limits.

The dissent is so evasive, so willfully blind to the actual matter at issue, as to make plain that the two are happy to watch Trump dismantle the rule of law from the sidelines.

Trump claims that if Homeland Security detains individuals on the allegation they are Tren de Aragua gang members, he has the right to send them to a brutal “Terrorism Confinement Center” in El Salvador without giving the men any chance to dispute that they are gang members or that the president has the authority to exile anyone to a foreign prison.

The rule of law requires more. Such accusations are frequently based on unreliable information, like tattoos, and must be considered by a neutral party – a judge. The government admitted Abrego Garcia, for example, was sent to El Salvador in “error,” and subsequent assertions he was a gang member rest on such dubious “evidence” as wearing a Chicago Bulls cap and a hoodie.

Friday morning the ACLU sued to restrain Trump and his government when they began the process of shipping more supposed gang members to El Salvador. After asking a federal trial court and then a federal court of appeals to pause the process so the men’s defenses could be heard, the ACLU went to the Supreme Court. And shortly before one a.m. on Saturday morning, seven Supreme Court justices issued this order halting Trump’s plan:

“The government is directed not to remove any member of the putative class of detainees [the supposed gang members] from the United States until further order of this Court.”

Saturday afternoon Justices Alito and Thomas released their opinion condemning the other seven justices for acting “hastily and prematurely,” and calling the decision “unprecedented” and “legally questionable.”

Alito and Thomas Attack the Seven-Justice Majority

The two right-wing justices, blustering in mock indignation, stormed a blizzard of objections:

  • The case didn’t come before the Supreme Court on the proper jurisdictional path.
  • The claimants should first have given the trial court more time to consider their application.
  • The Supreme Court should have waited to see what the Court of Appeals did.
  • The Trump administration didn’t have a chance to respond.
  • The proof the government meant to fly the men out of the country wasn’t good enough.

Alito and Thomas were simply outraged that the majority acted “within eight hours of receiving the application,” issued their order without taking the time to write an opinion and failed “to follow established procedures.”

Alito and Thomas decided simply to ignore the pressing considerations that prompted the majority to take immediate action

There are responses to the technical, procedural objections that Alito and Thomas raise. But we needn’t bother with the flawed technicalities because it is enough to observe that Alito and Thomas decided simply to ignore the pressing considerations that prompted the majority to take immediate action, the reasons they did not want to wait until morning to act.

For obvious reasons the court considered the matter urgent:

First: The Supreme Court had already issued an order, not two weeks earlier, that required the government to observe the fundamental principles of due process before removing anyone from the U.S. – that they have notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard.

“Detainees must receive notice . . . that they are subject to removal,” the Supreme Court directed on April 7, and “notice must be afforded within a reasonable time and in such a manner as will allow them to actually seek [judicial relief] before . . . removal occurs.” (Trump v. J.G.G.)

Moving swiftly was imperative because the government was already in the process of flouting the Supreme Court’s earlier order.

Second: The government had recently removed other alleged gang members from the U.S. by rushing them onto planes and flying them out of U.S. air space even while a court was weighing the claims of the supposed gang members. When the government acts with haste to deny due process, the accused have no choice but to quickly seek judicial review.

Was the Supreme Court to allow their requirement of due process before removal to be ignored again?

Third: The Trump administration maintains that once the government moves faster than the district court, it’s too late for a court to do anything. How can Alito and Thomas argue against urgency when the government acts summarily in order to negate the judiciary’s power to remedy even admitted wrongful action?

Fourth: If, as Alito and Thomas imply, the government may not have actually intended to fly the men out of the country before a court could act, then the order does no harm. It only bars the government from doing would they (supposedly) did not intend to do. Meaning there was no downside, no reason not to issue the order that so disturbs Alito and Thomas.

Justices Alito and Thomas Have Chosen the Side of Autocracy

The ACLU asked the Supreme Court to act immediately because waiting for further rulings by the trial court or by the court of appeals or for the Trump administration to submit a brief would likely have meant that the men would be in the Salvadoran prison by the time those things happened.

Have Alito and Thomas really failed to grasp the need for the urgency they decry?

Even the four other right-wing justices were ready to draw the line, ready to confront an administration that openly mocks the rule of law, claims that judges have no right to get in the way, and seems ready to ignore court orders. In the struggle between constitutional order and lawless presidential power, Justices Alito and Thomas have chosen the side of autocracy.

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