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Supreme Court Just Changed Immigration Appeals — And Almost No One Is Talking About It

While some Democratic leaders are talking about abolishing ICE and “fighting Trump,” the U.S. Supreme Court just made a major immigration ruling most Americans haven’t heard about.

And it matters.

In Urias-Orellana v. Bondi, the Court ruled that federal courts must defer to immigration authorities unless the evidence clearly proves the decision was wrong.

In simple terms:

Judges can’t just overturn immigration decisions because they would rule differently.

They can only reverse if no reasonable immigration authority could have reached that decision.

That’s called the “substantial evidence” standard.

This ruling reinforces three things:

🇺🇸 Courts don’t write immigration policy — Congress does.
🇺🇸 Immigration enforcement belongs to elected leaders accountable to voters.
🇺🇸 Endless appeals shouldn’t override reasonable agency decisions.

This isn’t about being anti-immigrant.

It’s about separation of powers, national sovereignty, and constitutional discipline.

If courts expand immigration law from the bench, they take power away from voters and give it to unelected judges.

The Supreme Court said no.

We’ll break down what this ruling really means for asylum claims, border enforcement, and the balance of power tomorrow.

🎙️ Checks & Balances @CheckBalPodX –

March 5, 2026

https://www.youtube.com/live/hBW1P1oxIPs?si=IvAvR1LcEhbEUoAn

#ChicagoFlipsRed #ChecksAndBalances #subscriptionlawyer #supremecourt

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