Close Menu
Truth Republican
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Guns & Gear
  • Healthy Tips
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Truth Republican
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Guns & Gear
  • Healthy Tips
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
Newsletter
Truth Republican
You are at:Home»News»How to make President Donald Trump’s immigration pause stick in court
News

How to make President Donald Trump’s immigration pause stick in court

Buddy DoyleBy Buddy DoyleDecember 4, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp
How to make President Donald Trump’s immigration pause stick in court
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

President Donald Trump promised to pause Third World immigration. Here’s how to make it stick against inevitable court challenges.

First, the president should use his authority under 8 U.S.C. 1182(f), but with a twist. That law authorizes the president to suspend the entry of “all aliens or any class of aliens,” whenever he finds their entry would be “detrimental to the interests of the United States.” The plain language is broad, encompassing economic and social interests, not just national security. Every president since Ronald Reagan has invoked it. The Supreme Court upheld it in 2018, noting the statute “exudes deference to the President.”

However, targeting specific countries invites unnecessary challenges: national origin discrimination, demands for statistical justification, probing the details of how the target list was developed. Courts can pick apart country-by-country distinctions endlessly.

TRUMP HAS MADE THE BORDER SECURE AGAIN — BUT NOW THE HARD PART BEGINS

A universal pause sidesteps all of that and there is a compelling justification.

It is “detrimental” to America’s interests to admit more immigrants when our mechanisms for filtering out welfare cases and asylum fraud are so broken. It might not be so bad if we could quickly fix mistakes, but it now takes forever to deport anyone.

Cite asylum. A DHS study found 70 percent of asylum applications involve fraud or suspected fraud. It was so jarring, the Obama administration refused to release it until a whistleblower testified to Congress. Even the New York Times concedes it is a problem. Over 1 million asylum claims were filed in 2023 alone, meaning roughly 700,000 fraudulent applications.

Then there’s the public charge disaster. Since 1882, immigration law has explicitly banned admitting anyone “likely, at any time, to become a public charge.” The logic is simple. It makes no sense to import welfare cases. Yet, 54% of immigrant headed households are on at least one form of public assistance. The reason is that bureaucrats are subverting Congress’s intent by interpreting the bar to apply only if the alien is “primarily dependent” on the benefit and it is paid in cash, meaning taking Medicaid, public housing or food stamps does not count. Efforts to restore the original meaning are tied up in court by activists. Today, over 11% of welfare benefits are claimed by immigrants who were admitted on the explicit premise that they would never claim welfare. It costs taxpayers $109 billion annually.

And that does not even include outright fraud. Federal prosecutors in Minnesota recently charged members of the Somali community in massive fraud schemes totaling hundreds of millions of dollars across child nutrition programs, housing services, and autism treatment. Law enforcement sources confirm that millions in stolen funds were sent back to Somalia, where some “likely ended up in the hands of Al-Shabaab,” a terrorist group.

When the screening mechanism cannot prevent welfare dependency despite explicit statutory prohibitions and cannot detect fraud at an industrial scale, continued mass admission is demonstrably detrimental to the national interest.

The administration’s second line of defense is injunction bonds. Federal law requires that plaintiffs seeking pre-trial injunctions post bond. The bond must be in an amount “proper to pay the costs and damages sustained” by any defendant wrongfully enjoined. Given the welfare outlays at stake, proper bonds should run in the tens of millions. Circuit courts have called adequate bonds “a condition precedent” to issuing an injunction and their absence “reversible error.” The Department must insist on adequate bonds in every case challenging these immigration restrictions and move to invalidate any bondless injunctions.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION

Third, while legal battles play out in court, a powerful defensive strategy should be proceeding behind the scenes: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem should rescind delegations of immigration approval authority. Congress vested the power to grant green cards, work authorizations and other benefits in the Secretary of Homeland Security personally. 8 U.S.C. 1255 states that an alien’s status “may be adjusted by the [DHS Secretary], in his discretion” to permanent resident. Even cases handled at consulates start at DHS. In practice, the secretary has delegated this authority down to immigration officers scattered across USCIS field offices. If she revokes these delegations, green card and other select benefit applications would require her personal signature, slowing processing to a crawl. This isn’t a workaround; it’s the secretary exercising the exact authority Congress gave her.

More modest fixes have failed for decades. It’s time to end the immigration debate with decisive action.

The president’s recent post calling for stricter immigration measures is a welcome development, but we have heard this kind of rhetoric before. The MAGA base has lost faith in the ability of the president’s team to follow through on his pronouncements. They need to think creatively and act with a sense of urgency in order to turn the President’s Truths into reality.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleWhy 97% of U.S. Homeowners Are Secretly Buying These 25 Defense Gadgets in 2025
Next Article California’s crackdown on ‘less-lethal’ weapons sparks 2A lawsuit targeting Newsom administration

Related Articles

Trump snubs Canada by withdrawing country’s invite to join ‘most prestigious Board of Leaders ever’

Trump snubs Canada by withdrawing country’s invite to join ‘most prestigious Board of Leaders ever’

January 23, 2026
Urban Meyer tabs Rutgers as next program to match Indiana’s improbable CFP run

Urban Meyer tabs Rutgers as next program to match Indiana’s improbable CFP run

January 23, 2026
Video captures Detroit student allegedly wielding boxcutter in classroom chase as teacher intervenes

Video captures Detroit student allegedly wielding boxcutter in classroom chase as teacher intervenes

January 23, 2026
11-Year-Old Charged As Adult With Homicide In Father’s Death After Nintendo Switch Taken Away

11-Year-Old Charged As Adult With Homicide In Father’s Death After Nintendo Switch Taken Away

January 23, 2026
Indiana football star Fernando Mendoza explains why dating took back seat during CFP title run

Indiana football star Fernando Mendoza explains why dating took back seat during CFP title run

January 23, 2026
France says it has ‘no desire’ to boycott World Cup amid US-Greenland deal ‘framework’

France says it has ‘no desire’ to boycott World Cup amid US-Greenland deal ‘framework’

January 23, 2026
Ryan Reynolds compares Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni situation to Johnny Depp case in private text messages

Ryan Reynolds compares Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni situation to Johnny Depp case in private text messages

January 22, 2026
Republicans narrowly reject efforts to handcuff Trump’s war powers in Venezuela

Republicans narrowly reject efforts to handcuff Trump’s war powers in Venezuela

January 22, 2026
Vanna White marries John Donaldson in secret ceremony after more than a decade together

Vanna White marries John Donaldson in secret ceremony after more than a decade together

January 22, 2026
Don't Miss
FDA upgrades cookie recall to highest danger level over undeclared peanuts

FDA upgrades cookie recall to highest danger level over undeclared peanuts

Trump calls for investigation into Ilhan Omar’s wealth, says it should start ‘NOW’

Trump calls for investigation into Ilhan Omar’s wealth, says it should start ‘NOW’

Trump snubs Canada by withdrawing country’s invite to join ‘most prestigious Board of Leaders ever’

Trump snubs Canada by withdrawing country’s invite to join ‘most prestigious Board of Leaders ever’

TOP 10 BEST RED DOT SIGHTS 2020

TOP 10 BEST RED DOT SIGHTS 2020

Latest News
Newly minted Virginia AG who fantasized about opponent’s family dying roasted over glaring typo

Newly minted Virginia AG who fantasized about opponent’s family dying roasted over glaring typo

January 23, 2026
Urban Meyer tabs Rutgers as next program to match Indiana’s improbable CFP run

Urban Meyer tabs Rutgers as next program to match Indiana’s improbable CFP run

January 23, 2026
TOP 10 BEST CAR CAMPING GEAR & GADGETS ON AMAZON

TOP 10 BEST CAR CAMPING GEAR & GADGETS ON AMAZON

January 23, 2026
LARRY KUDLOW: On the economy also, Mr. Trump is trying to save Europe from itself

LARRY KUDLOW: On the economy also, Mr. Trump is trying to save Europe from itself

January 23, 2026
RNC eyes ‘America First’ midterm convention to boost Trump, GOP ahead of critical elections

RNC eyes ‘America First’ midterm convention to boost Trump, GOP ahead of critical elections

January 23, 2026
Copyright © 2026. Truth Republican. All rights reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.