Supreme Court Backs Trump in Free-Speech Challenge by Immigration Judges
The U.S. Supreme Court has sided with Trump's administration in a free-speech dispute involving immigration judges, overturning a lower court decision. The case centers on a policy requiring judges to seek approval before public comments on immigration, a policy maintained by both Trump and Biden administrations.
The U.S. Supreme Court has delivered a win to President Donald Trump's administration in a case contesting the free-speech rights of federal immigration judges. The Tuesday ruling overturned a prior decision by a lower court and remanded the case for additional proceedings. The legal core of the speech restraint remains unexamined in this decision, which began during Trump's first tenure.
The ruling follows an appeal from Trump's camp after a lower court sought to determine whether dismissals of agency chiefs compromised their autonomy, which was initially intended by Congress. This issue bore relevance to immigration judges seeking judicial recourse on the speech restraint policy that demands prior approval for official communications.
The Executive Office for Immigration Review, responsible for the workings of the U.S.'s immigration courts, first introduced the policy under Trump, continuing under President Biden. While a Virginia judge dismissed the challenge in 2023, the 4th Circuit Court argued that Trump's leadership changes necessitated further fact-finding, prompting the appeal to the Supreme Court. The matter underlines recurring legal contests between presidential power and independent agency governance.
(With inputs from agencies.)

