Fifth Circuit may uphold Trump’s deportation law
President Donald Trump’s bold move to invoke a centuries-old law for swift deportations appears to be gaining traction in a key federal court.
According to Breitbart, a three-judge panel at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit heard arguments Monday regarding Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to target members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua.
The administration argues this gang’s activities constitute a threat akin to an invasion, justifying rapid removal of its members under the wartime statute. While the law has been largely dormant for decades, Trump’s team insists its text applies to modern threats like organized crime with foreign ties.
Judges Question Limits on Presidential Power
Judge Andrew S. Oldham, a Trump appointee, sharply questioned the opposition’s stance, asking if federal courts have the authority to override the president during what he deems an invasion. His skepticism of judicial overreach signals a court leaning toward executive discretion in matters of national security.
“Are we allowed to conduct a federal trial to countermand the president when he says this is an invasion?” Oldham pressed Lee Gelernt of the ACLU. With such pointed rhetoric, it’s clear the judge sees little room for courts to second-guess a commander-in-chief on border threats, especially when progressive legal challenges seem more about ideology than law.
Judge Leslie H. Southwick, appointed by George W. Bush, admittedthat Tren de Aragua might not match the classic image of an invading force. Yet, he noted Trump’s framing of the gang’s actions as a potential “preface to an invasion,” suggesting the president’s interpretation could hold legal water.
ACLU Pushes Back on Law’s Scope
The ACLU, representing alleged gang members, argued the 1798 law requires an armed, organized force, not mere criminal activity. Their lawyer, Gelernt, insisted the Founding Fathers didn’t intend the statute for “subtle clandestine” threats, a position that seems to ignore the evolving nature of security risks.
“It has to be an armed, organized force,” Gelernt argued before the panel. But in a world where foreign gangs allegedly plot murders on U.S. soil, as Justice Department lawyer Drew Ensign claimed, such a narrow reading feels like a relic of safer times.
Southwick countered with Trump’s assertion that Tren de Aragua operates with ties to the Venezuelan government, branding them unrecognized terrorists on American turf. His struggle to “draw the line” hints at a judiciary wary of undermining a president tackling border chaos head-on.
Historic Law Revived for Modern Threats
The Alien Enemies Act, enacted in 1798, allows the president to apprehend and deport non-naturalized individuals from hostile nations during war or when an invasion is threatened. Trump’s proclamation frames Tren de Aragua’s actions as a predatory incursion, reviving a law many thought obsolete.
Ensign told the court the gang had plans to target critics of Venezuela’s regime within the U.S., a chilling detail bolstering the administration’s case. If true, this isn’t just crime—it’s a foreign-backed assault on American sovereignty, precisely the kind of threat conservatives argue demands decisive action.
The law grants the president broad authority to set terms for such aliens’ restraint or removal, a power Trump is wielding to bypass the usual immigration slog. Critics may cry overreach, but supporters see a leader using every legal tool to protect citizens from imported danger.
Potential Path to Supreme Court
A victory at the Fifth Circuit could pave the way for Trump’s legal team to seek Supreme Court approval of this strategy. Given the conservative tilt of both courts, the odds seem to favor upholding executive power over border control.
For many on the right, this case underscores a long-overdue reckoning with porous borders and foreign criminal networks. While empathy exists for those caught in deportation’s crosshairs, the priority must be safeguarding American communities from threats that progressive policies often downplay.
As this legal battle unfolds, it’s a reminder that laws written in ink centuries ago can still carry weight in today’s fights. Trump’s gamble on the Alien Enemies Act might just prove that old statutes, when paired with resolute leadership, can address new crises—if the courts agree.




