The Supreme Court on Thursday said the Trump administration must facilitate the return of a Maryland man who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador, rejecting the administrationās emergency appeal.
The Supreme Court on Thursday said the Trump administration must facilitate the return of a Maryland man who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador, rejecting the administrationās emergency appeal.
What exactly it means to facilitate is part of what the court is considering. From the Vox article:
Thank you very kindly
Then we need to at least empower that district court to decide what constitutes a successful facilitation? For instance, if we donāt threaten tariffs unless we get the man back, apparently we didnāt even try.
I think that would be beyond the authority of the court, although exactly where the courtās authority ends is unclear. It doesnāt get to dictate foreign policy, so I expect that it can order the executive branch to do things consistent with the current foreign policy towards El Salvador (like asking for him back) but it cannot order the executive branch to dramatically change that foreign policy (by imposing tariffs).
The problem I foresee is that Trump can make an official request but also say that he would be happier if the request was not granted. (Something along the lines of āPlease return this horrible criminal, who I never want to have in America again, because the court is ordering me to ask you against my will, and keep in mind that if you say no then I wonāt force you to do anything and in fact Iāll like you better,ā which I donāt think is much of an exaggeration given Trumpās lack of subtlety.) If El Salvador then does not grant the request, Iām not sure what the court could do.
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Yeah it wouldnāt need to be said at all really, the AP headline (ok, article) on the court decision would be sufficient, but
Cheers for the double dose of insight