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Jerold D Cummins's avatar

Alito’s treatment of the asylum statute in Mullin v. Al Otro Ladu is particularly egregious. See analysis in Just Security, https://www.justsecurity.org/144499/supreme-court-otro-lado-asylum-border/.

Ben's avatar

The point about preliminary injunctions, temporary restraining orders, and so on, was the first thing that occurred to me. The danger in saying that hypothetical jurisdiction can be exercised as long as the context is "interim relief" ignores the question of what kind of relief qualifies as "interim." Would Alito say that any order short of a final judgment is "interim"? And if not, where should the line be drawn? The concept of hypothetical jurisdiction risks undoing the concept of jurisdiction altogether.

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