Judge VanDyke Dissent
Judge VanDyke Dissent
Judge VanDyke Dissent
Defendants-Appellants.
The parties in this appeal have filed a Joint Motion to Place Appeal in
Abeyance (Dkt. No. 83) pending settlement negotiations in this case, and a related
follows:
discussions. The parties shall file a joint status report 60 days after the entry of this
order and every 60 days thereafter. If the parties settle this case or settlement
discussions fail, the parties shall promptly notify the court. Submission of this case
The current administration promulgated the rule challenged in this case to help
manage the “historic surge in migration” that followed the end of the Title 42 order
and to relieve “significant strain on DHS’s operational capacity at the border.” See
88 Fed. Reg. 31314 (May 16, 2023) (codified at 8 C.F.R. §§ 208.33, 1208.33). After
the plaintiffs brought this case to enjoin and vacate the rule, the federal government
spent the better part of a year vigorously defending the rule’s critical necessity before
the district court and in this court—all because, in the government’s words, “any
that will significantly disrupt and tax DHS operations.” Indeed, only a few months
ago, the government insisted that “[i]f the Rule is unavailable, [it] expects ‘a surge
… that could match—or even exceed—the levels seen in the days leading up to the
end of’ the Title 42 order,” and that “the negative consequences of such an increase
in migration—for the government, for migrants, and for the public—would be even
greater than [before].” The executive even went so far as to urge that if our court
were to rule against it in this appeal, we should nevertheless stay our decision
pending the filing of a petition for relief from the Supreme Court to avoid the
disastrous consequences of the rule not being in force even for a short period of time.
And while the outcome of this case in the lower courts (including this one) was
anything but certain given the mess we previously made of our precedent during our
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court’s immigration wars with the prior presidential administration, the government
has to know the Supreme Court would likely not only reach the correct result in this
case, but in doing so rectify some of our court’s erroneous precedent. Any adverse
decisions from the Northern District of California and the Ninth Circuit would be
mere temporary speed bumps on the way to eventual, likely inevitable, vindication
Taking the government at its word about the pressing need for this crucial rule
to remain in effect and be enforced, our court granted a stay of the district court’s
decision enjoining the government’s rule. We heard oral argument and are now
poised to render our decision. Then suddenly, out of the blue, the parties come to us
hand-in-hand, jointly asking us to hold off making a decision while they “engage[]
eliminate the need for further litigation.” For months, the rule was so important that
“any interruption” in its implementation, even for a short period of time, would
incapacitate the executive’s border response. This panel made decisions based on
those representations. Now, the government implies the rule isn’t so important after
all. Indeed, the government is now “engaged in discussions” that could result in the
Either it previously lied to this court by exaggerating the threat posed by vacating
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the rule, or it is now hiding the real reason it wants to hold this case in abeyance.
Given its success thus far in defending a rule it has consistently characterized as
critical to its control of the border, and the fact that it has to realize its odds of success
in this case can only improve as it works its way vertically through the federal court
system, the government’s sudden and severe change in position looks a lot like a
purely politically motivated attempt to throw the game at the last minute. At the
very least it looks like the administration and its frenemies on the other side of this
case are colluding to avoid playing their politically fraught game during an election
year.
This court is a legal institution, not a political one. Thus it must insist that
parties provide adequate legal justifications for the relief they seek, whatever their
has provided no coherent legal reason why it has suddenly changed its position about
the importance of the continued enforcement of the rule challenged in this case, so I
government has not given us any real reason to do so here. The vague reasons the
parties have provided for a stay of litigation are sharply at odds with the reasons the
government gave us just a few short months ago for granting a stay of the district
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court’s preliminary injunction. The purported reason for halting this case is that
“there are currently two pending cases raising overlapping claims relating to the Rule
and its implementation that have been brought by some similarly situated plaintiffs
represented by overlapping counsel.” This sounds more like a normal day in the life
of a DOJ litigator than a compelling reason to stay a case. Having multiple cases
about the same issue in multiple courts is the norm for our federal government, so it
can’t be a real reason to slam the brakes on a case. And it’s not as if there is already
a decision from a lower court in another circuit awaiting a helpful verdict on appeal.
There are simply two similar proceedings, and since the present one has progressed
farther along than the one in the District Court for the District of Columbia, it makes
little sense to think that proceeding is a reason to stay this one. The federal
government routinely litigates similar issues in multiple courts, even when different
any other legal reason why they would seek to hold this case in abeyance. The
parties raise the prospect of settlement but have provided no reason why either party
would actually want to settle at this point given what the parties have previously told
this court. Any effect of the government’s only loss at this point has been reversed
by winning a stay from this court of the district court’s vacatur. Based on the
issuance of that stay, the only reasonable conclusion was that a majority of the panel
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in this case thought the government was likely to prevail on the merits. See Nken v.
Holder, 556 U.S. 418, 425–26 (2009) (stating that one of the relevant factors in
deciding to grant a stay is “whether the stay applicant has made a strong showing
that he is likely to succeed on the merits” (emphasis added)). Even assuming the
government were to lose before this court on the merits, which would make our prior
decision to stay the district court’s vacatur all the more perplexing, it is clear enough
emergency or permanent basis. Indeed, the government has already strongly implied
Given all of this, it’s hard to avoid any impression other than that the
ultimate win that would eventually come later this year, whether from this court or
It is also unclear what a settlement would even look like in this case. In its
briefing, the government has repeatedly stressed the vital importance of this rule in
fending off the border crisis. As the government explained, “[w]ithout the Rule, the
in the country, strains on government operations and resources, health and safety
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concerns for migrants at overcrowded processing facilities, and impacts on local
communities along the southwest border.” In the days before Title 42 ended, “‘DHS
saw a historic surge in migration’ … that ‘culminated with the highest recorded
capacity at the border.’” “Encounters between ports of entry nearly doubled in the
month before May 11, increasing ‘from an average of approximately 4,900 per day’
to ‘approximately 9,500 per day,’ including even higher numbers in the final few
days.” “Between May 8 and 11, the Border Patrol’s ‘daily in-custody average’ was
the many noncitizens who CBP needed to process, generated serious ‘health and
crossings that could match—or even exceed—the levels seen in the days leading up
to the end of’ the Title 42 order. The government thus ‘anticipates that any
that will significantly disrupt and tax DHS operations.’” Given the criticality of this
that “if the Court affirms in whole or in part, it leave the stay pending appeal in place
pending the filing and disposition of any petition for further review.” In other words:
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if you’re going to rule against us, please please please make sure we have the
opportunity to get a stay from the Supreme Court since this rule is so important.
Unless the government has grossly misrepresented the importance of its rule
and the ramifications of vacating it in its prior filings before this court, it seems that
any prospect of settling this case by recission of the rule would be a nonstarter.
Indeed, the government has been very careful not to suggest that in its intentionally
And it would make little sense for the plaintiffs—who are public interest
groups insisting they are harmed by the mere existence of the rule and that the rule
is contrary to law—to accept anything less than rescission of the rule. It is therefore
difficult to see what kind of acceptable middle ground the two parties could reach
that would satisfy the plaintiffs while allowing the government to keep enforcing the
rule.
that this seems to be nothing more than a collusive effort to postpone resolution of
this case until a more politically palatable time. The parties have given no indication
how long they expect the abeyance period to last, saying only that they will provide
status reports every 60 days. Should the court expect to sit on this case forever?
Until after election day in November? Until ballot counting is finished long after
that election? January 6, 2025? Given that the parties have provided no real reason
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why they are asking to abruptly halt this appeal, we have no idea when they plan to
start it up again. My guess is that sometime after November would fit their
lengths to both promulgate this rule and vigorously defend it. Yet now, a mere nine
months before the general election, and in the face of an immigration crisis that has
produced one of the most intense showdowns between state and federal government
inconsistent with its previous actions and representations to the court. So why? As
I see it, there are several interrelated possibilities, all of which are wholly political—
The administration may want to avoid going before the Supreme Court to
defend a rule that is obviously unpopular with its base during a presidential election
year in which immigration figures to be an important issue. The rule puts the
own constituency, and, as the government has vigorously argued, deeply necessary
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place, while postponing any potential Supreme Court fight about that tool until after
the election. This temporary resolution to the political problems presented by this
litigation affords the administration plausible deniability it can pitch to its base while
it nevertheless continues to enforce the rule to stave off a worse crisis at the southern
border.
loss in court, the optics of which could be particularly devastating during the current
proceedings in abeyance avoids the possibility of a loss before the Ninth Circuit that
could potentially exacerbate the issues at the border in the months leading up to the
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See, e.g., Statement from President Joe Biden On the Bipartisan Senate Border
Security Negotiations, The White House (Jan. 26, 2024),
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-
releases/2024/01/26/statement-from-president-joe-biden-on-the-bipartisan-senate-
border-security-negotiations (President Joe Biden calling the border “broken”);
Reese Gorman, Fetterman continues his feud with progressive Democrats and says
they ‘left’ him, Washington Examiner (Jan. 20, 2024),
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/2808370/fetterman-continues-his-
feud-with-progressive-democrats-and-says-they-left-him/ (Pennsylvania Senator
John Fetterman saying “There is a crisis …. We have a crisis at our border, and it
can’t be controversial that we should have a secure border.”); Greg Abbott
(@GregAbott_TX), Twitter (Sep. 20, 2023, 4:34 PM),
https://twitter.com/GregAbbott_TX/status/1704640256429985863 (describing the
border crisis as “an invasion”); ‘Secure our border along the southwest,’ Senator
Cortez Masto speaks on protection issues, News 3 Las Vegas (Jan. 24, 2024)
(Nevada Senator Catherine Cortez Masto calling to “secure our border along the
southwest”).
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election—a loss made even more damaging given that it would be meted out by a
with its base while blaming the practical results of that policy on the courts. Such a
strategy would be remarkably simple for the government to enact. Step one: Stay
proceedings before a final vindication of its position. Step two: Settle, agree not to
enforce the rule, and blame the courts for tying its hands. If this is truly the
government’s plan, then it is for all practical purposes seeking to repeal the rule
without the need for notice and comment, and its pro forma defense of the rule has
been rendered nothing more than a half-measure—an illusion. It could take credit
for creating an important rule and defending it with one hand, and then, by colluding
with the plaintiffs, it can set the policy it actually wants with the other, all while
collective-acquiescence.” Arizona v. City & County of San Francisco, 596 U.S. 763,
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Likewise, the executive may once again be trying to insulate bad Ninth Circuit
caselaw from Supreme Court review. As I and others have previously written, our
Easy Bay precedents are clearly wrong. See E. Bay Sanctuary Covenant v. Biden,
993 F.3d 640, 696 (9th Cir. 2021) (VanDyke, J., dissenting from the denial of
rehearing en banc); id. at 687 (Bumatay, J., same). Yet they aided the Democratic
cause by invalidating Trump-era immigration rules. If this case gets before the
Supreme Court, the safe bet is that it would overrule those erroneous precedents.
This settlement tactic is therefore a powerful tool for the administration: it lets it
before reaching the Supreme Court, and then throw up its hands and say it is bound
by that law.
current course of action because it hasn’t even attempted to tell us. But putting aside
the political legitimacy of any of the potential motivations discussed above, one
thing is clear: none of them are a legally sufficient reason to grant a judicial stay of
this case, particularly since the request is directly at odds with the many dire
predictions the government has previously made before this court. Up until now, we
have been repeatedly assured that the rule is critical to the security of the border. But
now, astoundingly, the government seeks to abandon its defense of the rule—or at
least put that defense on ice until a more politically convenient time. Whatever the
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parties’ real motivations are for seeking to stay this case, they haven’t provided us
with a legally sufficient basis for their sudden change of course. Accordingly, I
respectfully dissent from the panel’s decision to grant the stay motion.
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