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United States Court of Appeals FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT ____________ No. 25-5067 September Term, 2024 1:25-cv-00766-JEB Filed On: March 26, 2025 J.G.G., et al., Appellees v. Donald J. Trump, in his official capacity as President of the United States, et al., Appellants ------------------------------ Consolidated with 25-5068 BEFORE: Henderson, Millett, and Walker*, Circuit Judges ORDER Upon consideration of the emergency motions for stay, the opposition thereto, the reply, and the Rule 28(j) letters; the amicus brief filed by South Carolina, Virginia, and other states; the motion to participate as amicus curiae filed by Rep. Brandon Gill and the lodged amicus brief; and the motion for leave to participate as amicus curiae filed by State Democracy Defenders Fund and former government officials and the lodged amicus brief, it is ORDERED that the motions to participate as amicus curiae be granted. The Clerk is directed to file the lodged amicus briefs. It is FURTHER ORDERED that the emergency motions for stay be denied. Separate concurring statements of Judge Henderson and Judge Millett and a dissenting statement of Judge Walker are attached. Per Curiam FOR THE COURT: Clifton B. Cislak, Clerk BY: /s/ Daniel J. Reidy Deputy Clerk * Judge Walker dissents from the denial of the emergency motions for stay. KAREN LECRAFT HENDERSON, Circuit Judge, concurring statement: I. BACKGROUND A. Statutory Background In 1798, our fledgling Republic was consumed with fear. Fear of external war with France. Fear of internal strife from her sympathizers. And, for the incumbent Federalist party, fear of its chief political rival: the Jeffersonian Republicans. In the summer of 1798, the Federalists decided to kill two birds with one stone. In a series of laws known as the Alien and Sedition Acts, the Federalists granted the administration of President John Adams sweeping authority to expel immigrants, gag the free press and rid themselves of two key pillars of Republican supportâimmigrant voters and partisan newspapers. At the same time, these laws would purge the country of reviled Jacobin sympathizers. Under the first of these laws, the Alien Friends Act, the Congress granted the President sweeping power to detain and expel any alien he deemed âdangerous to the peace and safety of the United States.â Act of June 25, 1798, ch. 58., 1 Stat. 570. Under the Sedition Act, the Congress made it a crime to âwrite, print, utter or publish . . . any false, scandalous and malicious writing or writings againstâ the government, the Congress or the President, âwith intent to defame . . . or to bring them . . . into contempt or disrepute, or to excite against them . . . the hatred of the [] people.â Act of July 14, 1798, ch. 74, 1 Stat. 596. Both laws were enacted by narrow margins, widely derided as unconstitutional and allowed to lapse once the Federalists were swept from power in the elections of 1800. A third law, the Alien Enemies Act, offered a wartime counterpart to the Alien Friends Act. That law granted the President the power to detain and expel enemy aliens during times of war, invasion or predatory incursion. See Act of July 2 6, 1798, ch. 66, 1 Stat. 577. Unlike its counterparts, the Alien Enemies Act was never questioned by Jefferson or Madisonâ the de facto leaders of the Republicansâânor did either ever suggest its repeal.â Ludecke v. Watkins, 335 U.S. 160, 171 n.18 (1948). On the contrary, the then-Republican minority in the Congress supported its enactment. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it is the only component of the Alien and Sedition Acts that remains law today. The Alien Enemies Act (AEA) contains two provisions: a conditional clause and an operative clause. The conditional clause limits the AEAâs substantive authority to conflicts between the United States and a foreign power. Specifically, there must be (i) âa declared war between the United States and any foreign nation or government, orâ (ii) an âinvasion or predatory incursion [] perpetrated, attempted, or threatened against the territory of the United States by any foreign nation or government,â and (iii) a presidential âpublic proclamation of the event.â 50 U.S.C. § 21. If these conditions are met: [A]ll natives, citizens, denizens, or subjects of the hostile nation or government, being of the age of fourteen years and upward, who shall be within the United States and not actually naturalized, shall be liable to be apprehended, restrained, secured, and removed as alien enemies. The President is authorized . . . to direct . . . the manner and degree of the restraint to which they shall be subject . . . and to provide for the removal of those who, not being permitted to reside within the United States, refuse or neglect to depart therefrom; and to establish any other regulations which are found 3 necessary in the premises and for the public safety.1 Id. Thus, the AEA vests in the President near-blanket authority to detain and deport any noncitizen whose affiliation traces to the belligerent state. A central limit to this power is the Actâs conditional clauseâthat the United States be at war or under invasion or predatory incursion. B. Factual & Procedural Background On March 15, 2025, President Donald Trump invoked his authority under the AEA to apprehend, detain and remove âall Venezuelan citizens 14 years of age or older who are members of [Tren de Aragua]â and who are not ânaturalized or lawful permanent residents of the United States.â Invocation of the Alien Enemies Act Regarding the Invasion of the United States by Tren de Aragua (Proclamation), 90 Fed. Reg. 13,033 (Mar. 14, 2025). The Proclamation rests on two key findings. First, that Tren de Aragua (TdA)âa designated Foreign Terrorist Organizationâis conducting an invasion or predatory incursion into the United States. As evidence of these hostilities, the Proclamation cites TdAâs âirregular warfare within the country,â including its âdrug traffickingâ and âmass illegal migration to the United States.â Id. Second, that TdA is âclosely aligned with, and indeed has infiltratedâ the Venezuelan government, âincluding its military and law enforcement apparatus.â Id. As evidence of these connections, the Proclamation notes that TdA âgrew significantlyâ while Venezuelaâs Vice President was a state 1 The original AEA was limited to males over the age of 14 but was amended during World War I to its current version. See Act of Apr. 16, 1918, ch. 55, 40 Stat. 531. 4 governor. Id. The Proclamation also asserts that the President of Venezuela, Nicholas Maduro, sponsors a ânarco-terrorism enterpriseâ called CĂĄrtel de los Soles. Id. CĂĄrtel de los Soles in turn âcoordinates with and relies on TdA and other organizationsâ to traffic illegal drugs into the United States. Id. Learning of the Presidentâs Proclamation, five Venezuelans in the United States filed a putative class action to enjoin its enforcement. They also filed an emergency application for a temporary restraining order (TRO), alleging that the plaintiffs and class faced âimminent danger of being removed tonight or early tomorrow morning.â Mot. for TRO, J.G.G. v. Trump, No. 1:25-cv-766 (D.D.C. Mar. 15, 2025), ECF No. 3. Given the exigencies, the district court entered an immediate and ex parte TRO to prevent the Executive Branch from deporting any of the named plaintiffs for 14 days. The court conducted a hearing that evening, during which it provisionally certified a class of plaintiffs consisting of all noncitizens in U.S. custody who are subject to the Proclamation. It also entered a second TRO to cover the class for a period of 14 days. The government immediately appealed and sought a stay of the TROs pending its appeal of those orders. II. JURISDICTION In the ordinary course of litigation, a plaintiff obtains relief only if he secures a final judgment and prevails on the merits. Remedies come at the endânot the beginningâof a suit. But the world sometimes moves faster than the wheels of justice can turn. And waiting for a final judgment can do harm that no remedy can repair. For example, an election deadline may moot a challenge before a court can resolve the merits. E.g., Ne. Ohio Coal. for Homeless & Serv. Emps. Intâl Union, Loc. 1199 v. Blackwell, 467 F.3d 999 (6th Cir. 2006). Or a detainee 5 might face imminent expulsion before a court can resolve the lawfulness of his transfer. E.g., Belbacha v. Bush, 520 F.3d 452 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (granting a temporary injunction to preserve jurisdiction in a Guantanamo Bay detainee case). In such circumstances, courts need the ability to press pause. Our legal tradition recognizes this reality with various forms of interim relief. A plaintiff can obtain a preliminary injunction, which (as its name implies) is a preliminary form of relief meant to âpreserve the status quo pending the outcome of litigation.â Dist. 50, United Mine Workers of Am. v. Intâl Union, United Mine Workers of Am., 412 F.2d 165, 168 (D.C. Cir. 1969). âThe purpose of such interim equitable relief is not to conclusively determine the rights of the parties, but to balance the equities as the litigation moves forward.â Trump v. Intâl Refugee Assistance Project, 582 U.S. 571, 579â80 (2017) (citation omitted). In other words, a preliminary injunction acts to shield the plaintiff âfrom irreparable injuryâ and to âpreserve[] the trial courtâs power to adjudicate the underlying dispute.â Select Milk Prods., Inc. v. Johanns, 400 F.3d 939, 954 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (Henderson, J., dissenting). Sometimes even a preliminary injunction will not afford the rapid relief necessary to prevent irreparable injury. A preliminary injunction requires weighty considerations, and those considerations must be memorialized with findings of fact and conclusions of law. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(2). For that reason, courts may enter an even more provisional form of relief: a temporary restraining order. A TRO is âdesigned to preserve the status quo until there is an opportunity to hold a hearing on the application for a preliminary injunction.â 11A Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2951 (3d ed. June 2024 update). Given the exigencies that often accompany a TRO, a court may enter the order ex parte and without notice to the enjoined party. Fed. 6 R. Civ. P. 65(b)(1). But because the procedural safeguards are threadbare, a TRO may last for no longer than 14 days, although with the possibility of extension âfor good causeâ or with the consent of âthe adverse party.â Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(b)(2). TROs, unlike preliminary injunctions, are not ordinarily appealable. This has a âpractical justification,â Dellinger v. Bessent, No. 25-5028, 2025 WL 559669, at *12 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 15, 2025) (Katsas, J., dissenting)âTROsâ limited temporal duration means the juice is often not worth the squeezeâbut also a formal one: appellate courts have jurisdiction to review âfinal decisions of the district courtsâ only, with certain narrow exceptions. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. One such exception is for âinterlocutory orders . . . granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions, or refusing to dissolve or modify injunctions.â 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). That is why a preliminary injunctionâalthough not finalâis subject to appellate review. But no such exception exists for TROs. See Off. of Pers. Mgmt. v. Am. Fedân of Govât Emps., 473 U.S. 1301, 1303â05 (1985); Adams v. Vance, 570 F.2d 950, 953 (D.C. Cir. 1978) (âThe grant of a [TRO] . . . is generally not appealable.â). Nevertheless, in certain limited circumstances, courts have treated TROs as appealable orders. A TRO that threatens truly âirretrievableâ harmâthat is, harm that cannot be rectified on future appellate reviewâmay be appealed. Adams, 570 F.2d at 953. The government asserts two theories of jurisdiction. We need not decide the first because the second tips this case over the jurisdictional line. The government argues that the TROs risk âscuttling delicate international negotiationsâ and âmay [] forever stymie[]â those negotiations if allowed to remain in 7 place âeven temporarily.â Govât Br. 9; see also id. at 12 (warning that âonce halted, [deportations] have the significant potential of never resumingâ). In an accompanying affidavit, the government alleges that it has negotiated time-sensitive agreements with the governments of El Salvador and Venezuela to accept certain Venezuelan nationals subject to the challenged executive order. See Kozak Decl. at 1 ¶ 2. If true, those allegations establish that the government risks irretrievable injury and thus that we may exercise appellate jurisdiction. Granted, the government does not specify why a two-week interlude would dismantle the agreementsâit notes only that âforeign interlocutors might change their minds,â id. at 2 ¶ 4 (emphasis added)âbut in assessing our jurisdiction, we assume these claims to be true. Tel-Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic, 726 F.2d 774, 775 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (per curiam). One additional factor tips this case over the jurisdictional line. The district court entered two injunctions against all named defendantsâincluding the President of the United States. Equity âhas no jurisdiction . . . to enjoin the President in the performance of his official duties.â Mississippi v. Johnson, 71 U.S. (4 Wall.) 475, 501 (1867). Nor does the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) authorize relief against the President. See Dalton v. Specter, 511 U.S. 462, 469 (1994). Although injunctions against executive officials are routine and proper, âinjunctive relief against the President himself is extraordinary, and should . . . raise[] judicial eyebrows.â Franklin v. Massachusetts, 505 U.S. 788, 802 (1992). Whatever the merits (or lack thereof) of the governmentâs claims, an injunction against the President is reason enough to exercise jurisdiction. 8 III. THE STAY FACTORS Before granting a stay pending appeal, we consider (1) the applicantâs likelihood of success on the merits; (2) whether the applicant faces irreparable injury absent a stay; (3) whether a stay will substantially injure the other parties; and (4) the public interest. Nken v. Holder, 556 U.S. 418, 434 (2009). A. Likelihood of Success The government raises three arguments for why it is likely to succeed on the merits. First, the district court lacked jurisdiction to hear the case. Second, the political question doctrine bars consideration of the issues raised in this suit. Third, its conduct is lawful under the plain text of the Alien Enemies Act. 1. The District Courtâs Jurisdiction The government argues that plaintiffs sued in the wrong venue because their habeas claims could be heard only in the federal district where they are detained. A habeas remedy runs against the immediate custodian of a detaineeââthe person who holds [the detainee] in what is alleged to be unlawful custody.â Braden v. 30th Jud. Cir. Ct. of Ky., 410 U.S. 484, 494â95 (1973). Ordinarily, the immediate custodian âis the warden of the facility where the prisoner is being held.â Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 542 U.S. 426, 435 (2004). A habeas suit against the custodian must be brought in the detaineeâs âdistrict of confinement,â which â[b]y definitionâ is the same district in which the immediate custodian resides. Id. at 444. This is the only district where âjurisdiction lies.â Id. at 443; see also id. at 434 n.7 (noting that jurisdiction has a specific meaning in the habeas statute); id. at 451â52 (Kennedy, J., concurring) (explaining the rule is ânot jurisdictional in the sense of a limitation on subject-matter jurisdictionâ but is instead âa 9 question of personal jurisdiction or venueâ). The five named plaintiffs are currently detained at the El Valle Detention Center, Compl. ¶¶ 9â13, which is in the Southern District of Texas. For habeas relief, then, they must sue the warden of the Valle Detention Center in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas.2 Plaintiffs initially challenged the lawfulness of the Proclamation under the APA and sought various forms of relief, including a writ of habeas corpus. Compl. at 21. But they quickly abandoned their habeas claims and no longer contest their confinement, only their detention. Cf. Rumsfeld, 542 U.S. at 439 (explaining that habeasâ geographic limits have âno applicationâ when plaintiffs are ânot challenging any present physical confinementâ); Citizens Protective League v. Clark, 155 F.2d 290 (D.C. Cir. 1946) (hearing AEA challenge outside of habeas). The governmentâs second brief omits any discussion of proper venue and instead contains a conclusory assertion that the district court lacked jurisdiction because âthese claims sound in habeas.â Govât Br. 1. But cf. POM Wonderful, LLC v. FTC, 777 F.3d 478, 499 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (noting that arguments made âin conclusory fashion and without visible supportâ may be deemed forfeited (quoting Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Wash. v. EPA, 86 F.3d 1214, 1221 (D.C. Cir. 1996))). Assuming habeas relief is no longer sought, I turn to plaintiffsâ APA claims, which again, I assume constitute claims they can assert thereunder. 2 Padilla reserved judgment on whether the immediate- custodian rule applies to âan alien detained pending deportation.â 542 U.S. at 435 n.8. 10 2. The Political Question Doctrine a. The Availability of Judicial Review The government argues that we may not even assess the lawfulness of its conduct. In its view, whether there is an invasion or predatory incursionâor whether an organization qualifies as a foreign nation or governmentâis a political question unreviewable by the courts. Federal courts possess a âvirtually unflagging obligation . . . to exercise the jurisdiction given them.â Colo. River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States, 424 U.S. 800, 817 (1976); accord Cohens v. Virginia, 19 U.S. (6 Wheat.) 264, 404 (1821) (Marshall, C.J.). One âlimited and narrow exceptionâ to this duty arises when a case presents a purely âpolitical question.â Starr Intâl Co., Inc. v. United States, 910 F.3d 527, 533 (D.C. Cir. 2018) (citing United States v. Munoz-Flores, 495 U.S. 385 (1990)). A case falls within the sparing ambit of the political question doctrine âwhere there is âa textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; or a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it.ââ Nixon v. United States, 506 U.S. 224, 228 (1993) (quoting Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 217 (1962)). It is not enough to highlight that âthe issues have political implications,â Zivotofsky ex rel. Zivotofsky v. Clinton, 566 U.S. 189, 196 (2012) (quoting INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, 943 (1983)), or that the case âlies beyond judicial cognizanceâ because it âtouches foreign relations.â Baker, 369 U.S. at 211. At the outset, the governmentâs suggestion that judicial review of the Alien Enemies Act is categorically foreclosed is incorrect. See Govât Br. 14 (allowing that there could be a narrow sliver of questions âpotentiallyâ open to review without conceding the point). Nothing in the text of the AEA expressly 11 or implicitly forecloses the strong âpresumption [of] judicial review.â Coll. of Am. Pathologists v. Heckler, 734 F.2d 859, 862 (D.C. Cir. 1984). That result accords with the understanding of the enacting legislature. In the Fifth Congress, supporters of the AEA insisted âpersons [] imprisoned [under the Act] would [] have the power of demanding a trial.â 8 Annals of Cong. 1958 (1798). And early practice comports with that understanding. See McGirt v. Oklahoma, 591 U.S. 894, 914 (2020) (explaining that early practice can shed light on an ambiguous statute). For example, during the War of 1812, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court entertained a habeas petition from a British resident of Philadelphia challenging his relocation under the AEA. See Lockingtonâs Case, Bright (N.P.) 269 (Pa. 1813); Boumediene v. Bush, 476 F.3d 981, 988â89 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (describing the case), revâd, 553 U.S. 723 (2008). Chief Justice Marshall, riding circuit and sitting with St. George Tucker, ordered the release of an alien detained under the Act. See Gerald L. Neuman & Charles F. Hobson, John Marshall and the Enemy Alien, 9 Green Bag 2D 39, 41â42 (2005) (reproducing Marshallâs decision in United States v. Williams). b. The Scope of Judicial Review Although these cases establish the availability of judicial review, they do not settle the scope of that review. The government asserts that the âsole questionâ amenable to judicial scrutiny is whether a detained individual is âan alien enemy,â Govât Br. 14, i.e., whether the person is a fourteen year or older ânative[], citizen[], denizen[], or subject[]â of a presidentially declared hostile nation. 50 U.S.C. § 21. Any other AEA prerequisites are purportedly âpolitical question[s]â âoutside the competence of the courts.â Govât Br. 13. 12 The Court does not approach this issue in an analytic vacuum. In Ludecke v. Watkins, the Supreme Court reviewed the habeas petition of a German alien detained under the AEA during the Second World War. 335 U.S. at 162â63. Following Germanyâs unconditional surrender and a cessation of actual hostilities, the petitioner claimed that there was no longer a war giving rise to AEA authority. Id. at 166. Splitting 5-4, the Court disagreed. As it explained, a mere ceasefire does not conclusively resolve a war, nor do war powers subside simply because the âshooting stops.â Id. at 167. The mode of ending a war âis a political actâ and courts âwould be assuming the functions of the political agenciesâ to declare a war over when â[t]he political branch of the Governmentâ has not. Id. at 169â 70. The quantum of threat posed by enemy aliens during âa state of war [] when the guns are silent but the peace of Peace has not comeâ is a âpolitical judgment for which judges have neither technical competence nor official responsibility.â Id. at 170. From Ludecke, the government draws the mistaken inference that all questions of AEA authority are political and thus beyond the scope of judicial review. But that is not what the Court held. In no uncertain terms, the Court said the AEA âpreclude[s] judicial review . . . [b]arring questions of interpretation and constitutionality.â Id. at 163 (emphasis added). Questions of interpretation and constitutionalityâthe heartland of the judicial kenâare subject to judicial review. See Japan Whaling Assân v. Am. Cetacean Socây, 478 U.S. 221, 230 (1986) (explaining that âa decision which calls for applying no more than the traditional rules of statutory constructionâ is not a political question). Indeed, the Ludecke Court itself engaged in interpretation, rejecting a definition of âthe statutory phrase âdeclared warââ that would âmean âstate of actual hostilities.ââ Id. at 166 n.11, 170â71. Ludecke did not foreclose courtsâ ability to interpret the AEAâs predicate 13 actsâa declared war, invasion or predatory incursionâor whether such conditions exist. Instead, Ludecke stands for the proposition that when and by what means to end that acknowledged war are choices âconstitutional[ly] commit[ted] . . . to a coordinate political department.â Nixon, 506 U.S. at 228. Ludecke itself couched its holding in the line between law and policy and the role of the judge to only decide the former. The Alien Enemies Act, the Court explained, sets forth âconditions upon which it might be invokedâ but is silent as to âhow long the power should last when properly invoked.â Ludecke, 335 U.S. at 166 n.11. The petitioner did not contest the âproprietyâ of the conditional triggerââthe Presidentâs Proclamation of Warââonly its continued durability. Id. That latter question (how long the power should last) has no answer in the plain text of the Act. Put another way, such a question is lacking âjudicially discoverable and manageable standardsâ and thus lies outside the judicial purview. Nixon, 506 U.S. at 228. But conditional questionsâthe legal meaning of war, invasion and predatory incursionâare well within courtsâ bailiwick.3 3 The government also quotes Ludeckeâs statement that â[t]he very nature of the Presidentâs power to order the removal of all enemy aliens rejects the notion that courts may pass judgment upon the exercise of his discretion.â Id. at 164. But the Court was simply rejecting the argument that judicial approval was a prerequisite to arrest, detention or deportation. That principle had been established as early as the War of 1812. See Lockington v. Smith, 115 F. Cas. 758 (C.C.D. Pa. 1817). Indeed, immediately after the Ludecke language the government quotes, the Court dropped a footnote containing a long recitation from and citation to Lockington. Ludecke, 335 U.S. at 164 n.7. And Lockington did not foreclose 14 One month before the Supreme Courtâs decision in Ludecke, this Court reviewed a nearly identical challenge seeking injunctive and declaratory relief against enforcement of the AEA. See Citizens Protective League, 155 F.2d at 290. The challengers similarly alleged that AEA authority lapsed with the cessation of hostilities with Germany. Id. at 292. We rejected the challengersâ war-termination argument because â[i]t is not for the courts to determine the end of a war declared by the Congress.â Id. at 295. We said no moreâand no lessâ than the Supreme Court would the following month. The elected branchesânot the unelected benchâdecide when a war has terminated. That is a question of fact for elected leaders. That does not mean that courts cannot pass on the legal meaning of statutory terms. Finally, the government cites the Ninth Circuitâs decision in California v. United States for the proposition that an invasion is a nonjusticiable political question. 104 F.3d 1086 (9th Cir. 1997). That case is inapposite andâinsofar as it carries any relevanceâcuts directly against the government. There, California advanced precisely the theory the government claims here: that illegal immigration constitutes an invasion of the United States. Id. at 1090. This was part of a theoryâadvanced by several statesâasserting that (i) illegal immigration is an invasion; (ii) the United States was derelict in its duties under the Guarantee Clause to repel that invasion; and (iii) therefore the United States should compensate the states and better enforce immigration laws. Id. The Ninth Circuit had none of it, deeming the issue a political question better suited to the halls of the Congress than the Article III bench. Id. at 1091. judicial review; it expressly entertained a habeas challenge and then rejected it on the merits. Lockington, 115 F. Cas. at 759â62. 15 From that holding, the government draws the mistaken proposition that the existence vel non of an invasion is beyond judicial reach. That misreads California. That court rightly disclaimed any role âto determine that the United States has been âinvadedâ when the political branches have made no such determination.â Id. (emphasis added). This is merely the inverse of the Ludecke principle: just as the courts will not declare a properly declared war ended until the political branches do so, they will not start a war on the governmentâs behalf. Neither side of the coin precludes judicial review of whether the Executive has properly invoked a wartime authority. And insofar as California has any bearing on this case, it is against the government. Although the court declared the issue a political question, it also rejected the statesâ immigration-as-invasion theory on the merits. As the court put it, invasion refers to âsituations wherein a state is exposed to armed hostility from another political entityâ and âwas not intended to be used as urged by California.â Id. (citing the Federalist No. 43 (J. Madison)).4 At bottom, the government errs by âsuppos[ing] that every case or controversy which touches foreign relations lies beyond judicial cognizance.â Baker, 369 U.S. at 211. Sensitive subject matter alone does not shroud a law from the judicial eye. Cf. Japan Whaling Assân, 478 U.S. at 230 (âAs Baker plainly held, . . . courts have the authority to construe treaties.â). Indeed, we have previously considered the precise sort of question that the 4 Other circuits confronting similar claims have likewise concluded that declaring an invasion by judicial fiat would pervert the proper role of the political branches, and also that illegal immigration is not an âinvasion.â See Padavan v. United States, 82 F.3d 23, 28 (2d Cir. 1996) (explaining that âinvasionâ requires âarmed hostility from another political entity,â which is not âthe influx of legal and illegal aliens intoâ the United States); New Jersey v. United States, 91 F.3d 463, 468â70 (3d Cir. 1996) (same). 16 government contends we cannot. See Kaplan v. Cent. Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 896 F.3d 501, 514, (D.C. Cir. 2018) (reviewing whether certain conduct rises to the level of âan act of war within the meaning of [a] statut[e]â); Pan Am. World Airways, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 505 F.2d 989, 1015â16 (2d Cir. 1974) (assessing whether a planeâs hijacking was a âwarlike actâ or âwarlike operationâ). There is a âstrong presumptionâ in favor of judicial review of agency action like that of the Department of Homeland Security here, which may be overcome only by âclear and convincing evidenceâ that the Congress intended to strip jurisdiction over the particular category of challenge. Guerrero-Lasprilla v. Barr, 589 U.S. 221, 229â30 (2020). The government points us to no such textual hook. And its precedent fails to fill the gap. 3. The Alien Enemies Act The AEA provides that â[w]henever there is a declared war . . . or any invasion or predatory incursion is perpetrated, attempted, or threatened against the territory of the United States by any foreign nation or government,â its apprehension, detention and removal powers apply. 50 U.S.C. § 21. Quoting a dictionary over two-hundred years post-enactment, the government claims that the term âinvasionâ as used in the AEA encompasses âthe arrival somewhere of people or things who are not wanted there.â Govât Br. 17 (alteration omitted) (quoting Invasion, Blackâs Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024)). The text and its original meaning say otherwise. a. Invasion Begin with the text. The term âinvasionâ was a legal term of art with a well-defined meaning at the Founding. It required far more than an unwanted entry; to constitute an invasion, there had to be hostilities. As one leading dictionary of the era specifies, an invasion is a â[h]ostile entrance upon the right or 17 possessions of another; hostile encroachment,â such as when âWilliam the Conqueror invaded England.â Samuel Johnson, Invasion, sense 1, A DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (4th ed. 1773). As another recounts, an invasion is a âhostile entrance into the possession of another; particularly the entrance of a hostile army into a country for the purpose of conquest or plunder, or the attack of a military force.â Noah Webster, Invasion, sense 1, AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (1828). And because the invasion must be âby any foreign nation or government,â 50 U.S.C § 21, that entity would be an invaderâi.e., â[o]ne who enters the territory of another with a view to war, conquest or plunder.â Webster, Invader, sense 1. Next, look to context. The term âinvasionâ appears as part of a list of three interrelated terms: (i) âa declared warâ or âanyâ (ii) âinvasionâ or (iii) âpredatory incursion.â The basic interpretive principle of noscitur a sociis counsels reading an ambiguous word that appears in a list of related terms in light of the company it keeps. See Jarecki v. G.D. Searle & Co., 367 U.S. 303, 307 (1961). There could be a congressionally declared war, an invasion by the belligerent government or a lesser incursion into the United States. Each could trigger a formal change in relations between the United States and the hostile power under the law of nations, and, in turn, the relationship of America to that nationâs people. The surrounding statutory context confirms as much. First, the invasion must be âagainst the territory of the United States by any foreign nation or government.â 50 U.S.C. § 21 (emphasis added). The requirement that the âinvasionâ be conducted by a nation-state and against the United Statesâ âterritoryâ supports that the Congress was using âinvasionâ in 18 a military sense of the term.5 See Ex parte Bollman, 8 U.S. (4 Cranch) 75, 131 (1807) (describing levying war against the United States as âa military enterprize . . . against any of the territories of the United Statesâ); Wiborg v. United States, 163 U.S. 632, 633 (1896) (explaining that a group of seamen were charged with preparing for a âmilitary expedition . . . against the territory and dominions of a foreign princeâ). Undesired people do not arrive against the territory. But foreign armies canâand as the 1798 Congress feared mightâinvade the territory of the United States.6 Second, the invasion may be actual, âattempted, or threatened.â 5 U.S.C. § 21. Again, when used in reference to hostilities among nations, an attempted or threatened invasion of the United States would mark a logical trigger for enhanced presidential authority. Third, and relatedly, the conditional list of triggering eventsâa declared war, invasion or predatory incursionâmust be read against the means the Congress employed to combat the same. The AEA authorizes the President to restrain and remove the nationals of a belligerent foreign power. Such power tracks when invasion is considered in its military sense. Finally, consider history. The Alien Enemies Act was enacted by the Fifth Congress amid an actual conflictâthe Quasi-Warâwith France, a foreign power. War was front and 5 Invasion had a secondary meaning at the Founding that described â[a]n attack on the rights of another; infringement or violationâ of âthe rights of another.â Webster, Invasion, sense 2; see THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE para. 7 (U.S. 1776) (accusing the Crown of an âinvasion on the rights of the peopleâ); id. para. 8 (returning to a military connotation of invasion). By focusing on territory rather than individuals or rights, the Congress made plain it was using the military sense of the term. 6 Although TdA and other drug cartels are reported to control portions of other countries, that is not the case in the United States. 19 center in the minds of the enacting legislature. A little over one month before enacting the AEA, the same Congress authorized the President to raise a standing army of 10,000 men to combat any French invasion. But he could do so only âin the event of a declaration of war against the United States, or of actual invasion of their territory, by a foreign power, or of imminent danger of such invasion.â Act of May 28, 1798, ch. 47, § 1, 1 Stat. 558. This language bears more than a passing resemblance to the language of the AEA, which the Congress enacted a mere thirty-nine days later. In his most famous exposition against the Alien and Sedition Act, Madison explained that an â[i]nvasion is an operation of war.â James Madison, Report of 1800 (Jan. 7, 1800), in Founders Online [https://perma.cc/2D3N-N64Z]. In such times, the âlaw of nationsâ allowed for the expulsion of alien enemies as âan exercise of the power of war.â Id. Debates in the Congress surrounding ratification of the Alien and Sedition Acts support this read. Rep. Joshua Coit of Connecticut warned that the United States âmay very shortly be involved in warâ against France and that the âimmense number of French citizens in our countryâ could threaten the Republic. GORDON S. WOOD, EMPIRE OF LIBERTY 247 (2009). Rep. James Bayard of Delaware pushed back on critics of the new laws by warning of aliens who might be âlikely to join the standard of an enemy, in case of an invasion.â 8 Annals of Cong. 1966 (1798). Rep. John Allen of Connecticut cautioned that the country could not âwait for an invasion, or threatened invasionâ before granting the power to the President to remove aliens, noting that multiple European powers had fallen to France âby means of [alien] agents of the French nation.â Id. at 1578. Opponents of the Acts contested their constitutionality and warned thatâif acceptedâthey could lead to the suspension of habeas corpus, which is allowable âin cases of rebellion or invasion.â Id. at 1956 (Statement of Rep. Albert 20 Gallatin of Pennsylvania) (citing U.S. Const. art. I., § 9, cl. 2) (emphasis added). Supporters disputed that any suspension would occur, id. at 1958, but did not dispute that the AEA drew on wartime powers. On the contrary, they invoked, among other authority, the Congressâs âpower . . . of providing for the common defence,â id. at 1959 (statement of Rep. Gray Otis of Massachusetts) and the Presidentâs âpowers which [he] already possesses, as Commander-in-Chief.â Id. at 1791.7 This should come as no surprise. The term âinvasionâ was well known to the Fifth Congress and the American public circa 1798. The phrase echoes throughout the Constitution ratified by the people just nine years before. And in every instance, it is used in a military sense. For example, the Guarantee Clause provides that â[t]he United States shall . . . protect each [State] against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened) against domestic Violence.â U.S. Const. art. IV, § 4. The clause is a federal guarantee to the states against attack from without (invasion) or within (insurrection). In describing the clause, the Federalist Papers refer to invasion and domestic violence as âbloodyâ affairs involving âmilitary talents and experienceâ and âan appeal to the sword.â The Federalist No. 44 (J. Madison). To effectuate the guarantee, the Congress has power â[t]o provide for calling forth the Militia to . . . suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions.â U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 15. Again, to use military force against invasion. During these exigent times of hostilitiesââin Cases of Rebellion or Invasionââthe Congress may suspend âThe 7 Although âlegislative history is not the law,â Azar v. Allina Health Servs., 587 U.S. 566, 579 (2019), it can provide some probative evidence of the original public meaning of the text. And here, congressional debates squarely accord with the plain meaning of the text in context and are thus âextra icing on a cake already frosted.â Van Buren v. United States, 593 U.S. 374, 394 (2021). 21 Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus . . . when . . . the public Safety may require it.â Id. art. I, § 9, cl. 2. Finally, if the federal guarantee fails, a state may exercise its Article I power to âengage in Warâ but only if âactually invaded, or in such imminent Danger as will not admit of delay.â Id. art. I, § 10, cl. 3. When the Constitution repeats a phrase across multiple clausesâand the early Congresses echo that phrase in statuteâ it is a strong signal that the text should be read in pari materia. See 2B Shambie Singer & Norman J. Singer, Sutherland Statutes & Statutory Construction (7th ed. Nov. 2024 update) § 51:1â3; Akhil Reed Amar, Intratextualism, 112 Harv. L. Rev. 747, 788â91 (1999). The theme that rings true is that an invasion is a military affair, not one of migration. What evidence does the government muster against the weight of this evidence? It marshals a lone contemporary dictionary and then plucks the third-order usage of the term after skipping over its (still) more common military meaning. See Govât Br. 17 (citing Invasion, sense 3, Blackâs Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024)). But see id., sense 1 (â[a] military forceâs hostile entry into a country or territoryâ); cf. District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 577 (2008) (âNormal meaning . . . excludes secret or technical meanings that would not have been known to ordinary citizens in the founding generation.â). b. Predatory Incursion The government finds no safer refuge in the alternative âpredatory incursion.â The government defines the term as â(1) an entry into the United States, (2) for purposes contrary to the interests or laws of the United States.â Govât Br. 18. And it explains that illegal immigration and drug trafficking readily qualify under that standard. As before, the government misreads the text, context and history. An incursion is a lesser 22 form of invasion; an â[a]ttackâ or â[i]nvasion without conquest.â Samuel Johnson, Incursion, senses 1 & 2, A DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (4th ed. 1773). Its predatory nature includes a â[p]lundering,â such as the âpredatory war made by Scotland.â Id., Predatory, sense 1. Secretary of State Thomas Pickering used the term to describe a lesser form of attack that France could conduct against the U.S. and which, in his view, could be repelled by the militia. See Letter from Thomas Pickering to Alexander Hamilton (June 9, 1798), in Founders Online [https://perma.cc/VD5M- QSNA]. This was raised in contradistinction to a full invasion, which would require an army. Id. Rep. Otis likewise described a predatory incursion as a lesser form of invasion or war. 8 Annals of Cong. 1791 (1798). Early American caselaw sounds a similar theme: incursions referred to violent conflict. Alexander Dallas, appearing before the Marshall Court, described âpredatory incursions of the Indiansâ onto Pennsylvaniaâs frontier, which had led to âan Indian war.â Huidekoperâs Lessee v. Douglass, 7 U.S. (3 Cranch) 1, 11 (1805).8 Chief Justice Marshall referred to âincursions of hostile Indians,â which involved âconstant scenes of killings and scalping,â and led to a retaliatory âwar of extermination.â Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 1, 10 (1831); accord Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 515, 545 (1832) (explaining that Pennsylvaniaâs royal charter included âthe power of warâ to repel âincursionsâ by âbarbarous nationsâ). Like its statutory counterparts, predatory incursion referred to a form of hostilities against the United States by another nation- 8 Alexander Dallas was a lawyer and the first reporter of Supreme Court decisions responsible for the âDallasâ series. He later served as Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and Secretary of the Treasury. 23 state, a form of attack short of war. Migration alone did not suffice. 4. Issues Not Decided Preliminary relief is not simply a fast track to the merits. Because the Supreme Court has instructed that likelihood of success on the merits is among âthe most criticalâ factors, the partiesâ underlying dispute must be addressed. Nken, 556 U.S. at 434. Had the government shown a likelihood of success on any of the three issues above, it would have prevailed on the first factor. Two of the three issues discussed go to jurisdiction and all present purely legal questions amenable to a provisional peek at the merits. The multitude of outstanding issues raised by the parties are more amenable to resolution by the district court on remand than this Court on expedited review. It bears emphasis what we are not deciding. First, the analysis supra III.A.1â3 represents a preliminary view of the merits. The government remains free to muster additional evidence and arguments. But on the record presented, the government has yet to show a strong likelihood of prevailing. That is not âin any sense intended as a final decisionâ or meant to âintimate [a] view as to the ultimate merits.â Brown v. Chote, 411 U.S. 452, 456â57 (1973) (describing the role of preliminary rulings); Univ. of Texas v. Camenisch, 451 U.S. 390, 394 (1982) (emphasizing that it would be error to âimproperly equate[] âlikelihood of successâ with âsuccess.ââ). Just as plaintiffsâ TRO does not signal that they are âabsolutely certainâ to prevail, Wash. Metro. Area Transit Commân v. Holiday Tours, Inc., 559 F.2d 841, 844 (D.C. Cir. 1977), neither the district court nor the parties should attempt to imbue this opinion with an aura of finality. Second, I do not pass on whether TdA has conducted an âinvasion or predatory incursionâ âagainst the territory of the 24 United States.â 50 U.S.C. § 21. The government will have ample opportunity to prove its case and its evidence should be afforded the requisite deference due the Presidentâs national security judgments. See, e.g., Holder v. Humanitarian L. Project, 561 U.S. 1, 36 (2010) (recognizing that the governmentâs judgment in âsensitive [areas of] national security and foreign affairsâ âis entitled to significant weightâ); Trump v. Hawaii, 585 U.S. 667, 704 (2018) (noting the âconstrainedâ nature of judicial âinquiry into matters of . . . national securityâ). Third, I offer no view on whether TdAâs conduct is âperpetrated, attempted, or threatened . . . by a[] foreign nation or government.â 50 U.S.C. § 21 (emphasis added). The Proclamation claims that TdA âis closely aligned with, and [] has infiltratedâ the Venezuelan state such that it is a âhybrid criminal state.â This issue raises disputed questions of sovereignty, authority and control that turn as much on contested facts as they do legal conclusions. Ours is a court of review, not first view; such issues are appropriately left to the district court in the first instance. Finally, plaintiffs contend that the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)âs procedures are the âexclusive procedureâ for removal and thus eclipse any contrary authority in the AEA. Pl. Br. 24 (quoting 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(a)(3)). This claim, however, speaks more to plaintiffsâ likelihood of success on the merits than the governmentâs. And although it is a primarily legal question, it is one we need notâand therefore ought notâdecide in this nascent posture. B. Balance of Harms & Public Interest The harm to the government and the public interest factor âmergeâ when the government is seeking a stay, so they are considered together. Nken, 556 U.S. at 435. The government 25 spends almost all of its brief arguing the merits. As explained, the central purpose of preliminary reliefâwhether at the trial level or the appellate levelâis to prevent irreparable injury, not to short-circuit the normal course of litigation. The equities thus loom large in this early posture. Yet the only mention of irreparable injury in the governmentâs brief is to deny that plaintiffsâ injury is irreparable. See Govât Br. 12â13. Although plaintiffs must show irreparable injury to secure an injunction, it is now the defendant whoâseeking relief from an injunction so obtainedâmust show irreparable injury absent a stay of the injunction. See Nken, 556 U.S. at 434 (requiring a stay applicant to show âirreparabl[e] injur[y] absent a stayâ). Insofar as the argument is preserved, it is unavailing. The government warns that âdelayed removal may be removal denied.â Govât Br. 12 (emphasis added). Equity will not act âagainst something merely feared as liable to occur at some indefinite time.â Connecticut v. Massachusetts, 282 U.S. 660, 674 (1931); see also Murthy v. Missouri, 144 S. Ct. 7, 9 (2023) (Alito, J., with Thomas and Gorsuch, JJ., dissenting from grant of application for stay) (â[S]peculation does not establish irreparable harm.â); Singh v. Berger, 56 F.4th 88, 97 (D.C. Cir. 2022) (explaining that âthe [government] must demonstrate the specific harm that âwouldâânot couldâresult fromâ denying a stay). Next, the government claims that the TROs âimpede the President from using his constitutional and statutory authority to address a predatory invasion by a hostile group.â Govât Reply 13. The Presidentâs inherent constitutional authority is not the subject of the TRO and the burden on his statutory powers under the AEA is limited. The district courtâs injunction covers only deportation. The President may arrest and detain purported enemy aliens under the Proclamation without violating that order. Insofar as exigent circumstances 26 require prompt deportation, the President can tap his substantial authorities under the INA to do so. Finally, the TRO expires in just a few days. The government has not explained why its purported harms rise or fall on a few daysâ delay. The Executiveâs burdens are comparatively modest compared to the plaintiffsâ. Lifting the injunctions risks exiling plaintiffs to a land that is not their country of origin. See J.G.G. v. Trump, 1:25-cv-766 (D.D.C. Mar. 16, 2025), ECF Nos. 19, 21 (informing the district court that Venezuelan members of the plaintiff class were deported to El Salvador). Indeed, at oral argument before this Court, the government in no uncertain terms conveyed thatâwere the injunction liftedâit would immediately begin deporting plaintiffs without notice. Plaintiffs allege that the government has renditioned innocent foreign nationals in its pursuit against TdA. For example, one plaintiff alleges that he suffered brutal torture with âelectric shocks and suffocationâ for demonstrating against the Venezuelan regime. Id. (D.D.C. Mar. 19, 2025), ECF No. 44- 5 ¶ 2. While awaiting adjudication of his asylum claim, he was expelled to âEl Salvador with no notice to counsel or familyâ based on a misinterpretation of a soccer tattoo. Id. ¶¶ 5â7. To date, his family and counsel have âlost all contactâ and âhave no information regarding his whereabouts or condition.â Id. ¶ 10. The government concedes it âlack[s] a complete profileâ or even âspecific information about each individualâ it has targeted for summary removal. Id. (D.D.C. Mar. 17, 2025), ECF No. 26-1 ¶ 9. There is a âpublic interest in preventing aliens from being wrongfully removed, particularly to countries where they are likely to face substantial harm.â Nken, 556 U.S. at 436. The governmentâs response to this interest is that âremoval . . . is not categorically irreparable.â Govât Br. 12 (quoting Nken, 556 27 U.S. at 435). But in this procedural posture, it is not plaintiffsâ burden to prove irreparable injury; it is the governmentâs. We must consider whether a stay will âsubstantially injureâ plaintiffs. Nken, 556 U.S. at 434. And Nken emphatically states that âremoval is a serious burden for many aliens.â Id. at 435. For these reasons, the government has not met its burden to obtain the âextraordinary remedyâ of staying the district courtâs injunctions. KalshiEX LLC v. CFTC, 119 F.4th 58, 63 (D.C. Cir. 2024) (cleaned up). C. The Scope of Relief Even if we decline to stay the district courtâs injunctions, the government contends that we should narrow their scope. In its view, the lower court entered an âunconstitutionalâ âuniversal TRO.â Govât Br. 20; Govât Reply 15â16. Universal injunctions âha[ve] significantly stretched the traditional equitable powers of Article III courts.â Indus. Energy Consumers of Am. v. FERC, 125 F.4th 1156, 1168 (D.C. Cir. 2025) (Henderson, J., concurring). Even if universal relief is constitutionally soundâand there are reasons to believe it is notâcourts should be particularly wary before entering âan injunction that bar[s] the Government from enforcing the Presidentâs Proclamation against anyoneâ given the âtoll on the federal system . . . and for the Executive Branch.â Hawaii, 585 U.S. at 713 (Thomas, J., concurring). But what the district court did here was not a universal injunctionâi.e., it did not enter relief that goes beyond the parties to the suit. Instead, the court followed the Rules of Civil Procedure and certified a classâa class that will be bound by an unfavorable judgment just as much as by a favorable one. See Indus. Energy Consumers of Am., 125 F.4th at 1169 (Henderson, J., concurring) (pointing to class actions as a procedurally proper 28 way to afford relief to a disparate class); Samuel Bray, Multiple Chancellors: Reforming the National Injunction, 131 Harv. L. Rev. 418, 475 (2017) (describing class actions as the âobvious answerâ to the problems universal injunctions seek to address).9 Although the injunctionsâ breadth is permissible as to the plaintiffs, it is not as to all defendants. Specifically, the district courtâs TROs enjoin the President of the United States himself. At common law, the Chancellor could not grant âany relief against the king, or direct any act to be done by him.â 3 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 428. This historic limitation carries forward to today and strips the federal courts of equitable âjurisdiction . . . to enjoin the President in the performance of his official duties.â Johnson, 71 U.S. at 501. Separation of powers concerns pose an independent bar. We can no more âdirect the President to take a specific executive actâ than we can compel the âCongress to perform particular legislative duties.â Franklin, 505 U.S. at 829 (Scalia, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment). However, the government has not sought to lift the injunction as to the President alone. We do not ordinarily dispense ârelief that a party failed to clearly articulate in its briefs.â In re Kellogg Brown & Root, Inc., 756 F.3d 754, 763 (D.C. Cir. 2014). I decline to do so sua sponte today. On remand, the district court should modify its TROs to exclude the President from their scope. * * * At this early stage, the government has yet to show a likelihood of success on the merits. The equities favor the plaintiffs. And the district court entered the TROs for a quintessentially valid purpose: to protect its remedial authority 9 I do not pass on the class action âfitâ of the plaintiffsâ claims. 29 long enough to consider the partiesâ arguments. Accordingly, and for the foregoing reasons, the request to stay the district courtâs TROs should be denied. MILLETT, Circuit Judge, concurring: âThe government of the United States has been emphatically termed a government of laws, and not of menâ and women. Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137, 163 (1803). This means that the United States government adheres faithfully to the Constitutionâs requirements and duly enacted laws. Any government can hew to a legal path when dealing with easy and workaday matters of governance. The true mark of this great Nation under law is that we adhere to legal requirements even when it is hard, even when important national interests are at stake, and even when the claimant may be unpopular. For if the government can choose to abandon fair and equal process for some people, it can do the same for everyone. In this appeal, the government seeks exceptional emergency relief from temporary restraining orders that do just one thingâprevent the summary removal of Venezuelan immigrants to a notorious prison in El Salvador or other unknown locations without first affording them some semblance of due process to contest the legal and factual bases for removal. Plaintiffs are Venezuelan immigrants who the government claims are members of a violent criminal gang known as Tren de Aragua. In the governmentâs view, based on its allegation alone, Plaintiffs can be removed immediately with no notice, no hearing, no opportunityâzero processâto show that they are not members of the gang, to contest their eligibility for removal under the law, or to invoke legal protections against being sent to a place where it appears likely they will be tortured and their lives endangered. The district court has been handling this matter with great expedition and circumspection, and its orders do nothing more than freeze the status quo until weighty and unprecedented legal issues can be addressed through a soon-forthcoming preliminary injunction proceeding. There is neither jurisdiction nor reason for this court to interfere at this very preliminary stage or to allow the government to singlehandedly 2 moot the Plaintiffsâ claims by immediately removing them beyond the reach of their lawyers or the court. See Oral Arg. 1:44:39-1:46:23, J.G.G. v. Trump, 25-5067 (D.C. Cir. 2025), https://perma.cc/LB7B-7UFN (J. Millett: âMy question is, if we were to grant the relief you request, would the government consider it necessary to allow time to file a habeas petition before removing people? * * * [Is it] the governmentâs position that it could immediately resume mass removals of the five named Plaintiffs and the class members, immediately? Government: âYour Honor, * * * we take the position that the AEA does not require notice * * * [and] the government believes there would not be a limitation [on removal.]â). The Constitutionâs demand of due process cannot be so easily thrown aside. For those reasons I agree with the judgment denying the governmentâs motions for stays in this case. I This case arises at the intersection of the Due Process Clause of the Constitution, U.S. CONST. Amend. V, and the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, 50 U.S.C. §§ 21-24. A The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution provides, as relevant here, that â[n]o person shall * * * be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.â U.S. CONST. Amend. V. The âpersons[s]â protected by that foundational guarantee include all persons present in the United States, the law-abiding as well as those who violate the law, the immigrant without documentation as well as the citizen. See Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 306 (1993) (âIt is well established that the Fifth Amendment entitles aliens to due process of law in 3 deportation proceedings.â) (citing The Japanese Immigrant Case, 189 U.S. 86, 100-101 (1903)). While the Due Process Clauseâs coverage is broad, the amount of process due can vary based on the nature and context of the governmental intrusion. See Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 481 (1972) (âOnce it is determined that due process applies, the question remains what process is due. * * * Consideration of what procedures due process may require under any given set of circumstances must begin with a determination of the precise nature of the government function involved as well as of the private interest that has been affected by governmental action.â) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted); Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U.S. 97, 116- 117 (1934) (âDue process of law requires that the proceedings shall be fair, but fairness is a relative, not an absolute concept. * * * What is fair in one set of circumstances may be an act of tyranny in others.â). At its most basic, due process requires notice of adverse governmental action, an opportunity to be heard, and the right to an unbiased decisionmaker. See Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 333 (1976) (âThe fundamental requirement of due process is the opportunity to be heard âat a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.ââ) (quoting Armstrong v. Manzo, 380 U.S. 545, 552 (1965)); Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 313 (1950) (âMany controversies have raged about the cryptic and abstract words of the Due Process Clause but there can be no doubt that at a minimum they require that deprivation of life, liberty or property by adjudication be preceded by notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of the case.â); Tumey v. State of Ohio, 273 U.S. 510, 523 (1927) (Due process is violated when the decision maker has a âdirectâ and âsubstantialâ interest âin reaching a conclusion againstâ the defendant.). 4 In the specific context of immigration, Congress has enacted a comprehensive legal regime providing due process to those who the government alleges are unlawfully present in the United States. The Immigration and Nationality Act provides âthe sole and exclusive procedure for determining whether an alien may be * * * removed from the United States.â 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(a)(3). Under that Act, noncitizens are entitled to âapply for asylumâ if they can âestablish that race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion was or will be at least one central reason for [their] persecutionâ in the country of their nationality. Id. § 1158(a)(1), (b)(1)(B)(i). They also can seek âwithholding of removalâ to a country where it is more likely than not that they would face persecution. See id. § 1231(b)(3). In addition, the United States is a signatory to the Convention Against Torture and so is obligated not to return individuals to a country where they more likely than not would be tortured. See id. § 1231 note. To protect the Nationâs safety and security, Congress enacted special expedited removal proceedings for noncitizens who have been convicted of committing aggravated felonies, 8 U.S.C. § 1228(a), or are deemed to be âalien terrorist[s,]â id. § 1533(c)(2)(B). Even those expedited proceedings allow for notice and an opportunity to be heard before a neutral decisionmaker. Id. § 1229 (âIn removal proceedings * * * written notice * * *shall be given in person to the alien * * * specifying * * * [t]he time and place at which the proceedings will be held.â); id. § 1534(b)-(c) (âAn alien who is the subject of a removal hearing under this subchapter shall be given reasonable notice of the nature of the charges * * * and the time and place at which the hearing will be held[.] * * * The alien shall have a right to be present at such hearing[.]â). 5 B The Alien Enemies Act (âAEAâ) allows the President to âapprehend[], restrain[], secure[], and remove[]â âalien enemiesâ whenever âthere is a declared war between the United States and any foreign nation or government, or any invasion or predatory incursionâ into the United States. 50 U.S.C. § 21. Alien enemies are ânatives, citizens, denizens, or subjects of the hostile nation or government, being of the age of fourteen years and upwardâ who are ânot actually naturalized[.]â Id. If there has been no formal declaration of war by Congress, the President must make a âpublic proclamation[,]â 50 U.S.C. § 21, and âallow[]â enemy aliens a âreasonable timeâ to comply with the proclamationâs orders, id. § 22. The only exception is for enemy aliens âchargeable with actual hostility, or other crime against the public safety[.]â Id. Under the AEA, when a âcomplaint againstâ an âalien enemy residentâ is presented to a court of the United States, the courtâs âdutyâ is to provide âa full examination and hearing on such complaintâ and to decide whether there is âsufficient causeâ to have that person removed or otherwise detained. 50 U.S.C. § 23. The AEA was one of several measures known as the Alien and Sedition Acts passed in 1798 when the United States feared that France was planning a military invasion. STANLEY ELKINS & ERIC MCKITRICK, THE AGE OF FEDERALISM 588-591 (1993). The original version of the law was introduced by pro-war 6 Federalists and it would have required federal courts to simply fall in line and enforce the Presidentâs order: [A]ll Justices and Judges of the Courts of the United States * * * shall be * * * required to discharge, enforce, and execute the duties and authorities which shall be incumbent upon them respectively, by virtue of the rules and directions which, in any proclamation or other public act, the President of the United States shall and may make[.] 8 ANNALS OF CONG. 1786 (1798). That language received prompt opposition from Republicans who strongly resisted its effort to make judges âbe obedient to the will of the Presidentâ rather than âbeing obedient to the laws.â 8 ANNALS OF CONG. 1789 (1798) (statement of Rep. Gallatin). As Representative Gallatin summarized the problem, âthe whole of the bill might as well be in two or three words, viz: âThe President of the United States shall have the power to remove, restrict, or confine alien enemies and citizens whom he may consider as suspected persons.ââ Id. That original version of the Act was quickly rejected. Congress enacted instead the provision now codified at 50 U.S.C. § 23, in which courts, when presented with a case, are to undertake an independent examination of the asserted authority to remove a person under the Act. An Act Respecting Alien Enemies, ch. 66, § 3, 1 Stat. 578 (1798). As Representative Gordon explained, the AEA as amended would not violate âhabeas corpusâ because â[t]here is nothing in this bill to prevent a person from being brought before a Judge.â 8 ANNALS OF CONG. 1985 (1798); see id. at 2026 (statement of Rep. Harper) (âEvery man seized under this law, will have a 7 right to sue out a writ of habeas corpus, and if it appear that he is a citizen, he must be discharged.â); id. at 1967 (statement of Rep. Bayard) (âThis bill provides only for the arrestation of persons in certain cases, and it will be competent for every person so arrested to obtain a writ of habeas corpus.â). 1 As James Madison explained, the AEA was passed based on Congressâs âpower to declare warâ and was in accord with âthe law of nations.â The Report of 1800. The Supreme Court subsequently agreed with Madisonâs assessment, holding that the AEA is a constitutional exercise of congressional authority to âvest[] the Presidentâ with a âwar powerâ to manage alien enemies during the âshooting warâ and an appropriate period thereafter. Ludecke v. Watkins, 335 U.S. 160, 165 (1948). Before now, the AEA has been invoked only three times during the nationâs history: the War of 1812, World War I, and World War II. See Lockington v. Smith, 15 F. Cas. 758, 758- 759 (C.C.D. Pa. 1817) (discussing the War of 1812 1 The AEAâs counterpart was the Alien Friends Act, which gave the President authority to remove âall such aliens as he shall judge dangerous to the peace and safetyâ regardless of whether there was a declared war or invasion. An Act Concerning Aliens, ch. 58, § 1, 1 Stat. 571 (1798). Many considered the Alien Friends Act unconstitutional because it gave the President unreviewable discretion to remove noncitizens. See GORDON WOOD, EMPIRE OF LIBERTY 249-250 (2009). James Madison argued that the Alien Friends Act was unlawful because it did not allow for âthe benefits of a fair trial[.]â James Madison, The Report of 1800 (Jan. 7, 1800), https://perma.cc/K564-KQND. Thomas Jefferson also concluded that the Alien Friends Act was contrary to law because it violated the right to âdue process[.]â Kentucky General Assembly, Resolutions Adopted by the Kentucky General Assembly (Nov. 10, 1798), https://perma.cc/7JL4-N86T. No one was ever removed under the Alien Friends Act and it expired in 1800. AGE OF FEDERALISM, at 591-592. 8 proclamation); Proclamation, 40 Stat. 1651 (1917) (World War I); Proclamation: Alien EnemiesâJapanese, 6 Fed. Reg. 6,321 (Dec. 10, 1941) (World War II). 2 Judicial review has always been available to noncitizens detained or removed under the AEA. During the War of 1812, Chief Justice John Marshall and federal District Judge St. George Tucker ordered a British subject released because the local marshal had acted beyond his delegated authority by detaining the plaintiff without proper notice. See Gerald Neuman & Charles Hobson, John Marshall and the Enemy Alien, 9 GREEN BAG 39, 41-43 (2005) (describing the unreported case of United States v. Thomas Williams (C.C.D. Va. 1813)). The Pennsylvania Supreme Court later agreed with the Chief Justice that those subject to the AEA are entitled to judicial review. Lockingtonâs Case, Bright (N.P.) 269, 273, 285 (Pa. 1813). These early cases set a precedent followed during the twentieth century. Review was available during World War I, see, e.g., Ex parte Gilroy, 257 F. 110, 114 (S.D.N.Y. 1919), as well as World War II, e.g., Ludecke v. Watkins, 335 U.S. 160, 172 (1948) (â[H]earings are utilized by the Executive to secure an informed basis for the exercise of summary power[.]â). Indeed, during World War II, a former âmember of the Nazi Partyâ not only received a hearing on his eligibility for removal, but also had his case heard by the Supreme Court. Ludecke, 335 U.S. at 162 n.3. 2 The AEA has been amended once when, during World War I, language clarified that it applied to both men and women. An Act to amend section four thousand and sixty-seven of the Revised Statutes by extending its scope to include women, ch. 55, 40 Stat. 531 (1918). 9 As the court in Gilroy explained, â[v]ital as is the necessity in time of war not to hamper acts of the executive in the defense of the nation and in the prosecution of the war, of equal and perhaps greater importance, is the preservation of constitutional rights.â 257 F. 110 at 114. II A Tren de Aragua (âTdAâ) is a violent transnational criminal organization based in Venezuela. See United States Department of State, Designation of International Cartels, (Feb. 20, 2025), https://perma.cc/XJ7F-GY8U. The State Department designated TdA a foreign terrorist organization on February 20, 2025. See id. Although not publicly disclosed at the time, on March 14, 2025, President Trump signed a Proclamation invoking the Alien Enemies Act in response to âthe Invasion of the United States by Tren De Aragua.â See Invocation of the Alien Enemies Act Regarding the Invasion of the United States by Tren De Aragua, 90 Fed. Reg. 13033 (Mar. 14, 2025). The Proclamation was not released publicly until March 15, 2025, at 3:53 pm ET. See id; ECF No. 28-1 (Cerna Decl.) ¶ 5. 3 The Proclamation âfind[s] and declare[s] that TdA is perpetrating, attempting, and threatening an invasion or predatory incursion against the territory of the United States[,]â and that âTdA is undertaking hostile actions and conducting irregular warfare against the territory of the United States both directly and at the direction, clandestine or otherwise, of the 3 All ECF documents refer to the district court docket in this case, J.G.G. v. Trump, No. 25-cv-766 (D.D.C. Mar. 18, 2025). 10 Maduro regime in Venezuela.â Proclamation § 1. Based on these findings, the Proclamation provides that âall Venezuelan citizens 14 years of age or older who are members of TdA, are within the United States, and are not actually naturalized or lawful permanent residents of the United States are liable to be apprehended, restrained, secured, and removed as Alien Enemies.â Proclamation § 1. The Proclamation further âdirect[s] that all Alien Enemies described in * * * th[e] proclamation are subject to immediate apprehension, detention, and removal, and further that they shall not be permitted residence in the United States.â Proclamation § 3. The Proclamation directs the Attorney General and the Secretary of Homeland Security to execute these directives. Proclamation § 4. The Proclamation does not establish any process by which individuals are given notice of the governmentâs determination that they meet the Proclamationâs criteria and are therefore removable to a country of the governmentâs choosing. Nor does the Proclamation establish any process by which individuals may challenge the governmentâs determination that they meet the Proclamationâs criteria. Instead, upon the governmentâs determination that an individual meets the Proclamationâs criteria, that individual is subject to âimmediateâ removal, without notice and without time or opportunity to challenge their removal. Proclamation § 3. B Plaintiffs are a class of Venezuelan nationals in government custody who the government claims are subject to removal under the Proclamation. Plaintiffs are in the United States without permission or lawful documentation and, as a result, most if not all are already in immigration detention centers across the United States pending immigration hearings 11 or removal proceedings. But beginning in March 2025, at least some of them were moved to the El Valle Detention Facility in Texas. See ECF No. 3-3 (J.G.G. Decl.) ¶ 5; ECF No. 3-4 (Carney Decl. for G.F.F.) ¶ 12; ECF No. 3-5 (Shealy Decl. for J.G.O.) ¶ 5; ECF No. 3-6 (W.G.H. Decl.) ¶ 7; ECF No. 3-8 (J.A.V. Decl.) ¶ 7; ECF No. 44-6 (Thierry Decl.) ¶ 5; ECF No. 44-8 (Kim Decl.) ¶ 5. The government was unable to inform this court whether all individuals subject to the Proclamation have been moved to the El Valle Detention Facility, or whether they are scattered across detention centers around the country. Oral Arg. 1:47:43. Apparently having caught wind of the forthcoming Proclamation and the summary removals planned under it, in the early morning hours of March 15, 2025, five named Plaintiffs filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia a class action complaint and petition for writ of habeas corpus, and a motion for a Temporary Restraining Order (âTROâ) against the President, Attorney General, Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Department of State. See ECF No. 1 (Complaint); ECF No. 3 (TRO Motion). Plaintiffs allege that their expected summary removal would be unlawful because the Proclamation violated the terms of the AEA, bypassed the procedures set forth for removal in the Immigration and Nationality Act, violated the Administrative Procedure Act (âAPAâ), and deprived the Plaintiffs of constitutionally required due process to challenge their eligibility for removal. See ECF No. 1 (Complaint). All five of the named Plaintiffs vehemently deny that they are members of TdA. See ECF No. 3-3 (J.G.G. Decl.) ¶ 3; ECF No. 44-11 (Carney Decl. for G.F.F.) ¶ 3; ECF No. 44-12 (Smyth Decl. for J.A.V.) ¶¶ 9, 11; ECF No. 3-6 (W.G.H. Decl.) ¶ 12; ECF No. 44-9 (Shealy Decl. for J.G.O.) ¶ 4. Several of 12 the named Plaintiffs state, in fact, that they sought asylum in part because they themselves were victims targeted by TdA and other gangs. See ECF No. 44-11 (Carney Decl. for G.F.F.) ¶ 3; ECF No. 44-12 (Smyth Decl. for J.A.V.) ¶ 5; ECF No. 3-6 (W.G.H. Decl.) ¶¶ 3, 11, 12. According to Plaintiffsâ declarations, the government has accused one named Plaintiff, who is a tattoo artist, of TdA membership on the basis of his tattoo design, which was sourced from Google. ECF No. 3-3 (J.G.G. Decl.) ¶ 4. Other individuals subject to the Proclamation have also denied membership in TdA and have stated that the government has wrongly accused them of TdA membership based on tattoos that have no connection to TdA. See, e.g., ECF No. 44-5 (Tobin Decl.) ¶ 7 (declaring that individual is a Venezuelan professional soccer player with a tattoo of a soccer ball with a crown, similar to the logo of his favorite soccer team, Real Madrid). The government also accused another named Plaintiff of TdA membership because he attended a party where he knew no one other than the person who invited him. ECF No. 3-4 (G.F.F. Decl.) ¶¶ 5-6. At 9:20 am ET, on the morning of March 15, 2025, the district court âcontacted the [g]overnment and connected with defense counsel[.]â J.G.G. v. Trump, No. 25-cv-766 (JEB), 2025 WL 890401, at *6-7 (D.D.C. Mar. 24, 2025). At 9:40 am ET, the district court granted Plaintiffsâ motion for a TRO which prohibited the government from removing the five named Plaintiffs based on the Proclamation for fourteen days absent further order from the district court. Second Minute Order (Mar. 15, 2025). That same day, the government appealed the district courtâs TRO and filed an emergency motion to stay the TRO in this court. The district court also set an emergency hearing for 5:00 pm ET that day to consider whether to issue a TRO as to the entire class of individuals 13 whom the government asserts are subject to removal under the Proclamation. Despite Plaintiffsâ lawsuit and the district courtâs order setting a hearing for that afternoon, the government seems to have begun the removal process that morning. See ECF No. 44-9 (Shealy Decl.) ¶ 8; ECF No. 44-10 (Quintero Decl.) ¶ 3; ECF No. (Carney Decl.) ¶¶ 12-13; ECF No. 44-12 (Smyth Decl.) ¶ 14. By 9:20 am ET, at least one named Plaintiff, J.G.O., had been taken to an airport along with other Venezuelans. ECF No. 44-9 (Shealy Decl.) ¶ 8. On the afternoon of March 15, 2025, the district court held a hearing on Plaintiffsâ class certification motion. During the hearing, Plaintiffs represented that two flights âwere scheduled for this afternoon that may have already taken off or [will] during this hearing.â See Mar. 15 Tr. 12:23-25. In response, at 5:22 pm ET, the court adjourned the hearing and directed the government to determine whether removal of individuals under the Proclamation was underway. Around 6:00 pm ET, the district court resumed, and the government represented that it had no flight information to report to the court. See Mar. 15 Tr. 15:4-18:8. During the hearing, the district court also allowed Plaintiffs to dismiss their habeas claims without prejudice. See Mar. 15 Tr. 22:24-25. The district court then provisionally certified a class of all Venezuelan noncitizens subject to the Proclamation. See Mar. 15 Tr. 23:1-4, 25:9-10. At approximately 6:45 pm ET, the district court issued an oral TRO prohibiting the government from removing members of the class pursuant to the Proclamation for fourteen days absent further order from the district court. See Mar. 15 Tr. 41:18-21. The court also directed the government âthat any plane containingâ individuals subject to the Proclamation âthat is going to take 14 off or is in the air needs to be returned to the United States[.]â Mar. 15 Tr. 43:12-15. The district court emphasized that âthis is something that [the government] need[ed] to make sure [was] complied with immediately.â Mar. 15 Tr. 43:18-19. The court issued a written TRO at approximately 7:25 pm ET. See Fourth Minute Order (Mar. 15, 2025); ECF No. 21 (Plaintiffsâ Response to Defendantsâ Notice) at 1-2. As relevant here, that order provides: âPlaintiffsâ Motion for Class Certification is GRANTED insofar as a class consisting of âAll noncitizens in U.S. custody who are subject to the March 15, 2025, Presidential Proclamation entitled âInvocation of the Alien Enemies Act Regarding the Invasion of The United States by Tren De Araguaâ and its implementationâ is provisionally certified; [] The Government is ENJOINED from removing members of such class (not otherwise subject to removal) pursuant to the Proclamation for 14 days or until further Order of the Court[.]â Fourth Minute Order (Mar. 15, 2025). The court then set a highly expedited schedule for the government to seek vacatur of the TROs. Id. In so ruling, the district court was explicit that its order did not affect the governmentâs ability to apprehend or detain individuals pursuant to the Proclamation, nor did it require the government to release any individual in its custody subject to the Proclamation. Mar. 15 Tr. 42:16-18; Mar. 21 Tr. 9:2-16; J.G.G., 2025 WL 890401, at *1. In addition, neither TRO prevented the government from deporting any individual on the basis of authorities other than the Proclamation, including under the Immigration and Nationality Act. Mar. 15 Tr. 47:5- 8; J.G.G., 2025 WL 890401, at *1; see also ECF No. 28-1 (Cerna Decl.) ¶ 6 (government informing the court that a plane âdeparted afterâ the district courtâs TRO, âbut all individuals on that third plane had Title 8 final removal orders and thus 15 were not removed solely on the basis of the Proclamation at issueâ). C Questions of the governmentâs compliance with the TROs soon arose, which the district court continues to investigate. See Second Minute Order (Mar. 18, 2025); ECF No. 47 (District Court Order dated Mar. 20, 2025); ECF No. 49 (Notice filed by Govât dated Mar. 20, 2025); ECF No. 50 (Notice filed by Govât dated Mar. 21, 2025); ECF No. 56 (Notice filed by Govât dated Mar. 24, 2025). In those proceedings, the government has taken the position that it was not legally bound by and had no obligation to obey the district courtâs oral orders directing the return of airplanes in flight. The governmentâs repeated position in district court has been that those oral orders had no legal force until reduced to writing. See ECF No. 24 (Govât Mot. to Vacate) at 2 (â[A]n oral directive is not enforceable as an injunction.â); Mar. 17 Tr. 16:12-14 (âOral statements are not injunctions and [] the written orders always supersede whatever may have been stated in the record[.]â); id. at 17:20-21 (â[O]ral statements are not injunctions[.]â); see also Mar. 21 Tr. 4:18- 19, 6:4-5 (district court noting the governmentâs position that the oral ruling was not binding); Oral Arg. 1:48:24-1:49:19. On March 24, 2025, the district court denied the governmentâs motion to vacate the TROs. The district court found that Plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their claim that either the Proclamation or its implementation are unlawful under the AEA and unconstitutional for failure to provide Plaintiffs with any advance opportunity to challenge whether they qualify for removal under the Proclamationâs terms. See J.G.G., 2025 WL 890401, at *3. 16 III The government asks this court to stay the TROs. I agree with Judge Henderson that a stay should be denied. There is an unsurmountable jurisdictional barrier to the governmentâs request for a stay, and the governmentâs own threshold jurisdictional arguments fail. In addition, the balance of harms weighs strongly in favor of the Plaintiffs. A 1 A stay pending appeal is an âextraordinaryâ remedy. Citizens for Resp. & Ethics in Washington v. Federal Election Commân, 904 F.3d 1014, 1017 (D.C. Cir. 2018) (per curiam). To obtain such exceptional relief, the stay applicant must (1) make a âstrong showing that [it] is likely to succeed on the meritsâ of the appeal; (2) demonstrate that it will be âirreparably injuredâ before the appeal concludes; (3) show that issuing a stay will not âsubstantially injure the other partiesâ interested in the proceeding; and (4) establish that âthe public interestâ favors a stay. Nken v. Holder, 556 U.S. 418, 434 (2009) (quoting Hilton v. Braunskill, 481 U.S. 770, 776 (1987)). Here, the standard for obtaining a stay is even more daunting. That is because this court has no jurisdiction to hear an appeal from a temporary restraining order, making any claim of likelihood of success vanishingly low. See Belbacha v. Bush, 520 F.3d 452, 455 (D.C. Cir. 2008); see also Brotherhood of Railway & S. S. Clerks, Freight Handlers, Exp. & Station Emp. v. National Mediation Bd., 374 F.2d 269, 275 (D.C. Cir. 1966) (âA stay pending appeal is always an 17 extraordinary remedy, and it is no less so when extraordinary jurisdiction must be asserted as a prerequisite.â). By statute, âour appellate jurisdiction generally extends only to the âfinal decisionsâ of district courts.â Salazar ex rel. Salazar v. District of Columbia, 671 F.3d 1258, 1261 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 1291). There is an exception to that finality requirement for â[i]nterlocutory orders * * * granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions, or refusing to dissolve or modify injunctions.â 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). But that provision encompasses âinjunctionsâ only. See United States v. Hubbard, 650 F.2d 293, 314 n.73 (D.C. Cir. 1980). There âis no [equivalent] statutory provision for the appeal of a temporary restraining order.â Dellinger v. Bessent, No. 25-5028, 2025 WL 559669, at *4 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 15, 2025) (quoting Wright & Miller, Fed. Prac. & Proc. Civ. § 2951 (3d ed. June 2024 update)). As a result, we can review a TRO only if the appellant can show that the order is the legal equivalent of a preliminary injunction. See Belbacha, 520 F.3d at 455. The âlabel attached to an order by the trial court is not decisive[,]â and instead appellate courts must âlook to other factorsâ to determine whether a TRO should be treated as a preliminary injunction. Adams v. Vance, 570 F.2d 950, 953 (D.C. Cir. 1978) (citation omitted). Among those factors, we assess whether the TRO (1) remains in force longer than the time permitted for such an order under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65, Sampson v. Murray, 415 U.S. 61, 86 (1976); (2) âforeclose[s]â the appellant âfrom pursuing further interlocutory relief in the form of a preliminary injunction,â Belbacha, 520 F.3d at 455 (citation omitted); or (3) otherwise upsets âthe status quo 18 pending further proceedingsâ in ways that have âirretrievableâ consequences, Adams, 570 F.2d at 953. The government has not shown that any of those exceptions apply. First, the TROs fall well within the 14-day time length (extendable for another 14 days for âgood causeâ) allowed by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65. FED. R. CIV. P. 65(b)(2). The district court has been handling this complicated matter with speed and diligence, and has directed the Plaintiffs to file any motion to convert the TROs into a preliminary injunction by March 26, 2025, which is a date within the original 14-day time period for the TROs. When a district court arranges for a âprompt hearing on a preliminary injunction[,]â this court does not short-circuit that process and treat a TRO as a âde factoâ injunction. Office of Pers. Mgmt. v. American Fedân of Govât Emps., AFL-CIO, 473 U.S. 1301, 1305 (1985) (Burger, C.J., in chambers). 4 Second, the government does not even argue that the TROs have somehow impaired its ability to pursue injunctive relief of its own. So that avenue for appeal of the TROs is closed. Third, the district courtâs TROs are carefully tailored just to preserve the status quo while the court obtains briefing and the factual development needed to rule on a motion for a preliminary injunction. In removal cases, the status quo is the âstate of affairs before the removal order was entered.â Nken, 556 U.S. at 418 (âAlthough such a stay acts to âba[r] Executive Branch officials from removing [the applicant] from the 4 For those reasons, the governmentâs argument that the TROs amount to preliminary injunctions because they are slated to last 14 days is without merit. Govât First Stay Mot. 3-5. 19 country,â * * * it does so by returning to the status quo[.]â) (citation omitted). That status quo is the time before the Proclamation and removals under it commenced. See also Huisha-Huisha v. Mayorkas, 27 F.4th 718, 734 (D.C. Cir. 2022) (â[T]he status quo [i]s âthe last peaceable uncontested statusâ existing between the parties before the dispute developed.â) (quoting 11A Wright & Miller § 2948 (3d ed. 1998)). Importantly, the district court has tailored its TROs to operate even more narrowly than the status quo by allowing the apprehension and detention of alleged TdA members under the Proclamation, proscribing only their removal under the AEA. Mar. 15 Tr. 42:16-18 (ordering a TRO âto prevent the removal of the class for 14 daysâ); Mar. 21 Tr. 9:2-16 (underscoring that the TROs allow the government to keep Plaintiffs âin-custodyâ and do ânot order anybody to be released into the United Statesâ); J.G.G., 2025 WL 890401, at *1 (âNeither Order prevented the Government from apprehending anyone pursuant to the * * * Proclamation.â). In addition, the court has been explicit that nothing in the TROs prohibits removals based on other legal grounds such as the Immigration and Nationality Act. Mar. 15 Tr. 47:5-8; J.G.G., 2025 WL 890401, at *1 (â[N]either Order prevented the Government from deporting anyoneâincluding Plaintiffsâthrough authorities other than the Proclamation, such as the INA.â). In those ways, this case bears no resemblance to Adams v. Vance, supra, on which the government hangs its jurisdictional hat. Govât First Stay Mot. 5; Govât Second Stay Mot. 9. In Adams, this court treated a TRO as a preliminary injunction because, instead of âpreserv[ing] the status quo pending further proceedings,â it âcommanded an unprecedented action irreversibly altering [a] delicate diplomatic balanceâ in the âarenaâ of international restrictions on whale hunting. 570 20 F.2d at 953. In particular, that TRO would have forced the Secretary of State to file a formal âobjectionâ to an action of the International Whaling Commission. Id. The TROs at issue here are the polar opposite. Rather than compelling Executive action, they simply stay the governmentâs hand in part. 2 The government nonetheless argues that the TROs should be treated as injunctions because they work âan extraordinary harmâ to the Presidentâs authority under Article II to conduct foreign affairs. Govât First Stay Mot. 4; Govât Second Stay Mot. 8. But the government has shown no such harm here, and its own arguments weigh against it. To start, as noted above, the TROs do not affect the governmentâs ability to remove deportable individuals under federal laws other than the AEA or to detain and arrest anyone who is a threat to national or domestic security. So the only potential harm is the temporary inability to remove individuals under the AEA and Proclamation. As to that limitation, the government agrees that individuals are entitled to challenge in court whether they fall within the terms of the AEA or are otherwise not lawfully removable under it. Oral Arg. 1:41:55-1:42:28, 1:42:50- 1:43:12. Indeed, the government repeatedly points to unidentified habeas corpus litigation in Texas raising those very types of claims. Oral Arg. 19:46-20:10, 20:30-20:50, 22:14-22:20, 31:00-31:40. Given that the government agrees that removal can be delayed to allow for due process review in habeas consistent 21 with national security, the same must be true in this courthouse. Certainly the government has given no reason that the delays occasioned by these TROs affect national security in a way different than the removal delays associated with the habeas corpus cases of which it procedurally approves. And, if the government were correct in concluding that AEA removal challenges could be brought in habeas, that litigation could afford the same relief from imminent removal sought here. So the government has not shown how the nature of the relief afforded in these TROs itself somehow impacts national security. The governmentâs last national security objection is that the district courtâs oral order on March 15th to turn around airplanes removing class members under the AEA was the equivalent of a court ordering a carrier group to redeploy from the South China Sea. Oral Arg. 1:03-1:12. A TRO directing military deployments or maneuvers certainly would raise profound separation of powers questions warranting the most careful consideration and remediation. But nothing remotely like that happened here. The district courtâs TROs only directed immigration officials to preserve their custody, and thus the courtâs jurisdiction, over the Plaintiffs. The government does not dispute that the Plaintiffs on the non-military planes and the planes themselves were fully under its control at the time of the courtâs oral order. See Munaf v. Geren, 553 U.S. 674, 686 (2008) (âAn individual is held âin custodyâ by the United States when the United States official charged with his detention has âthe power to produceâ him.â) (quoting Wales v. Whitney, 114 U.S. 564, 574 (1885)); see also Braden v. Thirtieth Judicial Circuit Court of Kentucky, 410 U.S. 484, 489 n.4 (1973) (petitioner can be âin custodyâ of an entity through that entityâs agent); Umanzor v. Lambert, 782 F.2d 1299, 1302 (5th Cir. 1986) (stating that there was âlittle 22 difficulty in concludingâ that habeas petitioner was âin custodyâ where petitioner âwas under actual physical restraint by the governmentâs agentâthe airlineâ and noting that petitioner âwas imprisoned inside of the aircraft, against his will, until the aircraft completed the flight and he was released[]â). Even more to the point, the governmentâs persistent theme for the last ten days has been that the district courtâs oral direction regarding the airplanes was not a TRO with which it had to comply. See ECF No. 24 (Govât Mot. to Vacate) at 2 (â[A]n oral directive is not enforceable as an injunction.â); Mar. 17 Tr. 16:12-14 (âOral statements are not injunctions and [] the written orders always supersede whatever may have been stated in the record[.]â); id. at 17:20-21 (â[O]ral statements are not injunctions[.]â); see also Mar. 21 Tr. 4:18-19, 6:4-5 (district court noting the governmentâs position that the oral ruling was not binding); Oral Arg. 1:48:24-1:49:19. I leave the merits of that argument for the district court to resolve in the first instance. But the one thing that is not tolerable is for the government to seek from this court a stay of an order that the government at the very same time is telling the district court is not an order with which compliance was ever required. Heads the government wins, tails the district court loses is no way to obtain the exceptional relief of a TRO stay. 5 5 See New Hampshire v. Maine, 532 U.S. 742, 749 (2001) (A party may not âprevail[] in one phase of a case on an argument and then rely[] on a contradictory argument to prevail in another phase.â) (citation omitted); Solo v. United Parcel Serv. Co., 947 F.3d 968, 972 n.2 (6th Cir. 2020) (positions in district court and on appeal cannot be contradictory). 23 Next, the government claims that the TROs ârisk[] scuttling delicate international negotiationsâ providing for the removal of Plaintiffs to Venezuela and El Salvador. Govât Second Stay Mot. 9; ECF No. 26-2 (Kozak Decl.) ¶¶ 2-4. The government then says that âremoval delayed tends to become removal denied.â Govât Reply 3. But the governmentâs arguments keep running into themselves. The government has no objection on diplomatic grounds to removal delays while individualized review of whether a noncitizen falls within the Proclamationâs own terms is under way. At least as long as it is a habeas action. But once again, we are lacking any explanation as to why the Plaintiffsâ APA claim challenging the governmentâs across-the-board failure to allow any opportunity for that review is somehow a different strain on diplomatic relations. At bottom, the TROsâ purpose is to ensure that justice is neither delayed nor denied to Plaintiffs. In addition, the government does not explain why there would be any possible breakdown in diplomatic discussions over ensuring that removed individuals are, in fact, members of TdA. Surely the government claims no diplomatic interest in sending individuals to El Salvador or Venezuela who are not members of TdA and so are not covered by the Proclamation. See Proclamation § 1 (invoking authority over âVenezuelan citizens 14 years of age or older who are members of TdAâ) (emphasis added). I will not put the cart before the horse and rely on a harm that assumes the very fact Plaintiffs vigorously contest. 3 There is yet another (non-jurisdictional) procedural problem with the governmentâs request for a stay. Appellate 24 Litigation 101 requires parties seeking a stay from this court to first request one from the district court. FED. R. APP. P. 8(a)(2); Powder River Basin Res. Council v. United States Depât of Interior, No. 24-5268, 2025 WL 312649, at *1 (D.C. Cir. Jan. 24, 2025) (per curiam); Teva Pharms. USA, Inc. v. Food & Drug Admin., No. 05-5401, 2005 WL 6749423, at *1 (D.C. Cir. Nov. 16, 2005) (per curiam). The government is fully familiar with that requirement. In fact, the government routinely asks this court to dismiss stay requests by other parties for failure to seek a stay below, see Govât Br. 9, Vertical Aviation Intâl, Inc. v. Federal Aviation Auth., No. 25-1017 (D.C. Cir. Mar. 19, 2025); Govât Br. 8, Frontier Airlines, Inc. v. Department of Transp., No. 25-1002 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 6, 2025); Govât Br. 10, Bull v. Drug Enf. Agency, No. 13-1279 (D.C. Cir. Nov. 20, 2013), and we commonly agree, see Vertical Aviation Intâl, Inc. v. Federal Aviation Auth., No. 25-1017 at 1 (D.C. Cir. Mar. 19, 2025); Frontier Airlines, Inc. v. Department of Transp., No. 25-1002 at 1 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 6, 2025); Bull v. Drug Enf,. Agency, No. 13-1279 at 1 (D.C. Cir. Nov. 20, 2013). Yet the government completely failed to seek stays of the TROs from the district court at all. Not for lack of time. It has had more than a week to do so. And not for temporarily forgetting the requirement. It has openly flagged its noncompliance in its briefs. Govât First Stay Mot. 4 n.1; Govât Second Stay Mot. 8 n.1. There are occasional exceptions to seeking a stay in district court, but the government has argued none of them here. I would deny the stay on this additional ground. The government needs to play by the same rules it preaches. And it needs to respect court rules. 25 B While the government has not demonstrated a likelihood of establishing jurisdiction over its appeals and request for a stay of the TROs, a majority of this panel has concluded otherwise. Given that resolution, I address why the governmentâs own threshold arguments challenging the district courtâs jurisdiction also are unlikely to succeed. 1 a The government argues that Plaintiffsâ case is non- justiciable because the Executive Branchâs interpretation of the AEA as applying to the removal of members of a criminal gang is a judicially unreviewable political question. Govât First Stay Mot. 4. I note at the outset that the governmentâs argument does not suggest that the Plaintiffsâ constitutional entitlement to notice and some opportunity for pre-removal due process is a political question. So this argument by the government does not actually affect the district courtâs jurisdiction to enter the TROs. Anyhow, political questions are decisions committed by the Constitution to the discretion of the Political Branches or lacking judicially manageable standards of review. See Zivotofsky ex rel. Zivotofsky v. Clinton, 566 U.S. 189, 197-198 (2012) (Zivotofsky I). Although federal courts must account for prudential considerations when deciding whether an issue constitutes a political question, see Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 217 (1962), the Constitutionâs assignment of responsibilities and the feasibility of judicial review are âthe 26 most importantâ factors, Schieber v. United States, 77 F.4th 806, 810 (D.C. Cir. 2023), cert. denied, 144 S. Ct. 688 (2024). The gravamen of the governmentâs position is that the President has total and unreviewable authority to decide whether the statutory prerequisites for invoking the AEA are met in Plaintiffsâ case. This includes deciding whether TdA is a âforeign nation or governmentâ and whether its actions amount to an âinvasion or predatory incursionâ into the United States. 50 U.S.C. § 21. That argument is not likely to succeed. The judiciary, not the Executive, has the ultimate constitutional responsibility and capacity for saying what statutes and statutory terms mean. Under the Constitution, federal courts are vested with the âjudicial Power of the United States[,]â U.S. CONST. Art. III, § 1, and â[i]t is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.â Marbury, 5 U.S. at 177. âWhen the meaning of a statute [is] at issue, the judicial role [is] to âinterpret the act of Congress, in order to ascertain the rights of the parties.ââ Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, 603 U.S. 369, 385 (2024) (quoting Decatur v. Paulding, 39 U.S. 497, 515 (1840)). In addition, statutory interpretation is judicially manageable because it does not require courts to exercise âtheir own political judgment[.]â Rucho v. Common Cause, 588 U.S. 684, 705 (2019). Instead, the judicial âtask is to discern and apply the lawâs plain meaning as faithfullyâ as possible. BP P.L.C. v. Mayor & City Council of Baltimore, 141 S. Ct. 1532, 1542 (2021). Because questions about meaning are objectively discernible from statutory text and context, courts can decide them âby applying their own judgment.â Loper Bright, 603 U.S. at 392. 27 That is why the âSupreme Court has never applied the political question doctrine in cases involving statutory claims of this kind.â El-Shifa Pharm. Indus. Co. v. United States, 607 F.3d 836, 855 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (Kavanaugh, J., concurring in the judgment). Instead, the Court has emphasized that whether to âenforce a specific statutory rightâ is âa familiar judicial exercise,â not a political question. Zivotofsky I, 566 U.S. at 196. That remains true even if the statuteâs subject concerns foreign or military affairs. Zivotofsky, 566 U.S. at 196 (statutory right to passport designation implicating diplomatic status of Jerusalem is not a political question). Indeed, â[i]t is error to suppose that every case or controversy which touches foreign relations lies beyond judicial cognizance.â Baker, 369 U.S. at 211. Many legal questions arising from statutes involving foreign policy are not political questions. 6 And many cases require courts to decide whether the plaintiff has a statutory right based on terms like âwar,â âpeace,â and âhostilitiesâ abroad. See Lee v. Madigan, 358 U.S. 228, 229 (1959); Woods v. Cloyd W. Miller Co., 333 U.S. 138, 140-141 (1948); Ludecke, 335 U.S. at 166-167; Al-Alwi v. Trump, 901 F.3d 294, 300 (D.C. Cir. 2018). 6 See Zivotofsky I, 566 U.S. at 194; Japan Whaling Association v. American Cetacean Society, 478 U.S. 221, 229 (1986); Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Franklin Mint Corp., 466 U.S. 243, 254 n.25 (1984); Al-Tamimi, 916 F.3d at 13; Schieber, 77 F.4th at 812; Simon v. Republic of Hungary, 812 F.3d 127, 150 (D.C. Cir. 2016), abrogated on other grounds by Federal Republic of Germany v. Philipp, 592 U.S. 169 (2021); Wilson v. Libby, 535 F.3d 697, 703- 704 (D.C. Cir. 2008); DKT Memorial Fund, Ltd. v. Agency for International Dev., 810 F.2d 1236, 1238 (D.C. Cir. 1987); Population Institute v. McPherson, 797 F.2d 1062, 1068 (D.C. Cir. 1986). 28 This case fits that same apolitical, statutory-construction mold. The parties disagree about the meaning of words. For example, relying on dictionaries from when the AEA was written, the plaintiffs argue that the word âinvasionâ means âentrance of a hostile army[.]â Plsâ Br. 21 (citing Websterâs Dictionary, Invasion (1828)). By contrast, the government cites a modern dictionary defining âinvasionâ as the âarrival somewhere of people or things who are not wanted[.]â Govât First Stay Mot. 12 (citing Blackâs Law Dictionary, Invasion (12th ed. 2024)). The judiciary can resolve this disagreement with settled tools of statutory construction. To be sure, other non-interpretive parts of the Proclamation may involve expert and discretionary judgments. For example, whether a criminal gang has infiltrated a foreign government so deeply that it has become a part of that government itself may well be a judgment for the Political Branches to make. Cf. Zivotofsky ex rel. Zivotofsky v. Kerry, 576 U.S. 1, 28 (2015) (deciding political status of Jerusalem is a political question); Oetjen v. Century Leather Co., 246 U.S. 297, 302 (1918) (determining government of Mexico is a political question); Jones v. United States, 137 U.S. 202, 212 (1890) (determining sovereignty over Guano Islands is a political question); Lin v. United States, 561 F.3d 502, 506 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (determining sovereignty over Taiwan is a political question); U.S. CONST. Art. II, § 3 (The President âshall receive Ambassadors and other public Ministers[.]â). But once those decisions are made, determining whether the political answer falls within the meaning of a statutory term is the job of the Judicial Branch. 29 b The governmentâs efforts to shoehorn the statutory interpretation questions in this case into the political-question doctrine are unlikely to succeed. First, the government argues that the Supreme Court foreclosed judicial review of the AEAâs meaning in Ludecke. Actually, the Supreme Court said the opposite. Ludecke, which is the only Supreme Court case interpreting the AEA, said that courts may not âpass judgment upon the exercise of [the Presidentâs] discretionâ when invoking the AEA. 335 U.S. at 164. But the discretion to which the Court referred was the Presidentâs judgment whether, in the conduct of a war, to invoke the Act and, if so, whether to remove, relocate, or just detain alien enemies. Ludecke, 335 U.S. at 164-169. But the separate issue of what the AEAâs text means is a question of law, not discretion. That is why the Supreme Court specifically held that the AEAâs âinterpretation and constitutionalityâ are matters to be decided by federal courts. Ludecke, 335 U.S. at 163-164. In fact, the central question resolved by the Supreme Court was whether the term âwarâ in Section 21 of the Act requires ongoing hostilities for the AEA to remain in force. Id. at 166-167. The Court engaged in statutory construction and held that, even if the shooting has stopped, the relevant state of âwarâ continues until the Political Branches terminate the Nationâs state of war. Id. at 167-169. So Ludecke conclusively heldâand showedâthat interpreting 30 the meaning of the AEAâs words falls within the Judicial Branchâs wheelhouse. 7 Second, the government maintains that whether there has been an âinvasion or predatory incursionâ of the United States and whether TdA is a âforeign nation or governmentâ are committed to the Presidentâs discretion. Not likely. For one, this case does not require the court to âsupplant a foreign policy decisionâ with its own âunmoored determination of what United States policyâ should be. Zivotofsky I, 566 U.S. at 196. Instead, the district court is assessing whether exceptional removal procedures are available for alleged members of TdA under the AEA. The Supreme Court addressed the same question for German nationals in Ludecke. 335 U.S. at 166-167. There, the Supreme Court decided what âwarâ means under the AEA. This case involves what the neighboring terms âinvasionâ and âincursionâ mean. 50 U.S.C. § 21. How the President should combat the dangers posed by TdA, whether to treat TdA as an arm of the Venezuelan state, and whether to remove or detain qualifying TdAâs members are not questions under review, any more than the Presidentâs conduct of World War II was under review in Ludecke. All the district court is deciding is whether the AEA permits the government to deny Plaintiffs all pre-removal notice and due process. Resolving that issue is a core judicial responsibility. See, e.g., Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 542 U.S. 507, 529 (2004). 7 The government also claims that this court held that AEA claims are non-justiciable in Citizens Protective League v. Clark, 155 F.2d 290 (D.C. Cir. 1946). Not so. Citizens Protective League ruled on the merits of a constitutional challenge to the AEA, concluding that the âAlien Enemy Act is constitutional[.]â Id. at 293. Any contrary suggestion in the opinion regarding the non-justiciability of statutory interpretation issues was superseded by Ludecke. 31 In addition, the government is mistaken about the extent of unilateral Executive authority under the Constitution. An assertion of exclusive Executive authority is âthe least favorable of possible constitutional posturesâ and it runs aground here on the express constitutional assignment of relevant authority to Congress. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 640 (1952) (Jackson, J. concurring). For it is Congress that has the power to ârepel Invasions[,]â U.S. CONST. Art. I, § 8, cl. 15, and retains âplenary authorityâ over noncitizens, INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, 940 (1983); see U.S. CONST. Art. I, § 8, cl. 4. While the âUnited Statesâ must âprotect eachâ state âagainst Invasion,â nothing in the Constitution assigns this responsibility exclusively to the President. Id. Art. IV, § 4, and, in fact, Article I indicates otherwise, id. Art. I, § 8, cl. 15 (giving Congress the power to repel invasions). To be sure, the President enforces laws that Congress makes on these subjects because the President must âtake Care that the Laws be faithfully executed[.]â U.S. CONST. Art. II, § 3. But that authority is bounded by the statutory limits Congress has set in the AEA, and determining what those statutory terms mean is a judicial responsibility. Id. Art. III, § 1. This is so even for questions concerning war and international aggression. âFrom the very beginningâ federal courts have determined âthe law of nations which prescribes, for the conduct of war, the status, rights and duties of enemy nations as well as of enemy individuals.â Ex parte Quirin, 317 U.S. 1, 27-28 (1942). The government argues lastly that, as a practical matter, the judiciary should not contradict the Executiveâs interpretation of the statute. Govât First Stay Mot. 17-18. That sounds like an argument for the version of the AEA that Congress refused to enact, under which courts would simply 32 follow âthe rules and directions which, in any proclamation or other public act, the President of the United States shall and may make[.]â 8 ANNALS OF CONG. 1786 (1798). Congress chose instead to enact an AEA that denied unchecked Executive authority and left an independent role for the courts. 50 U.S.C. § 23; contrast An Act Concerning Aliens, ch. 58, § 1, 1 Stat. 571 (1798) (granting the President discretion to remove any alien he âjudge[d] dangerous to the peaceâ). In any event, the government identifies no prudential reasons the district court or this court should shrink back in this case. The government has not identified any conflict with âthe other two branchesâ at all, Al-Tamimi, 916 F.3d at 12 (emphasis added). Nor, at this pre-merits stage, has the government explained why the district courtâs preservation of the status quo so that the Plaintiffs can obtain the due process review (which the government agrees they can have) crosses any prudential lines. Something âmore is requiredâ for a political question than mere âinconsistency between a judicial decision and the position ofâ an Administration. Id. 2 a Equally unavailing is the governmentâs suggestion that the District of Columbia is the incorrect location for this suit. The government argues that, because the Plaintiffsâ âclaims sound in habeasâ and the âonly proper venueâ for a habeas petition is the venue where a detainee is being held, Plaintiffs must sue in Texasânot the District of Columbia. Govât First Stay Mot. 8. At the outset, to the extent the government is arguing that Plaintiffsâ failure to file in the district of detention deprives the district court of subject matter jurisdiction, that argument has 33 no purchase. In a habeas petition, the place of detention matters for personal jurisdiction or venue, but not for subject matter jurisdiction. See Braden, 410 U.S. at 493 (applying âtraditional venue considerationsâ to identify the correct forum for a habeas suit); see also Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 542 U.S. 426, 434 n.7 (2004) (referring to âjurisdictionâ as used in the habeas statute, ânot in the sense of subject-matter jurisdiction of the District Courtâ); id. at 451 (Kennedy, J., concurring) (â[T]he question of the proper location for a habeas petition is best understood as a question of personal jurisdiction or venue.â). But the governmentâs argument flounders for a more fundamental reason. Plaintiffsâ claims are not habeas claims and do not sound in habeas. Their complaint originally included one count alleging their detention violated the right to habeas corpus. ECF No. 1 (Complaint) ¶¶ 105-106. But the district court has since granted Plaintiffsâ motion to dismiss that count from the complaint, Mar. 15. Tr. 22:23-25, and the rest of Plaintiffsâ claims are routine APA claims. Habeas corpus is the proper vehicle for challenges to the legality of custodial detention, not the proper vehicle for a petitioner to âclaim the right to * * * remain in a country or to obtain administrative review potentially leading to that result.â DHS v. Thuraissigiam, 591 U.S. 103, 117 (2020). The Supreme Court has been crystal clear on this point: âThe writ simply provide[s] a means of contesting the lawfulness of restraint and securing releaseâ from detention. Id. In Thuraissigiam, a noncitizen in detention sought a writ of habeas corpus to prevent his deportation to Sri Lanka. The Court held that he could not pursue his claim through habeas because he sought, in many ways, the opposite of release from detention. 591 U.S. at 119. â[T]he Government [wa]s happy to release himâprovided the release occur[red] in the cabin of 34 a plane bound for Sri Lanka.â Id. But, because Thuraissigiam wanted instead âthe opportunity to remain lawfully in the United States[,]â his requested relief fell âoutside the scope of the writ[.]â Id. Likewise, in Munaf, American citizens in U.S. custody in Iraq during military operations there filed habeas petitions to prevent their transfer to Iraqi authorities for criminal prosecution. 553 U.S. at 692. The Supreme Court held that their âclaims do not state grounds upon which habeas relief may be granted.â Id. âHabeas is at its core a remedy for unlawful executive detention[,]â and â[t]he typical remedy for such detention is, of course, release.â Id. at 693. Because the âlast thingâ the petitioners in Munaf wanted was âsimple releaseâââthat would expose them to apprehension by Iraqi authorities for criminal prosecutionââthey could not press their claims through a habeas action. Id. at 693-694. Like the plaintiffs in Thuraissigiam and Munaf, Plaintiffs here do not seek release from detention; they want to stay in detention in the United States. The gravamen of their complaint is that the government cannot implement the Presidentâs proclamation by removing them from the United States and releasing them into the custody of a foreign sovereign, especially without affording them basic due process. See ECF No. 1 (Complaint) ¶¶ 71-73. In other words, the âlast thingâ Plaintiffs want is release from U.S. detention, Munaf, 553 U.S. at 693. b Given that precedent, the Plaintiffsâ APA action is an appropriate vehicle for the challenges they raise to the defendant agenciesâ implementation of the Proclamation without notice and due process. Unless otherwise precluded by 35 statute, the APA generally provides a cause of action to challenge removals outside of the immigration laws. Shaughnessy v. Pedreiro, 349 U.S. 48, 51 (1955); see Robbins v. Regan, 780 F.2d 37, 42 (D.C. Cir. 1985) (â[J]urisdiction over APA challenges to federal agency action is vested in district courts unless a preclusion of review statute * * * specifically bars judicial review in the district court.â); see also 8 U.S.C. § 1252(g) (stripping courts of jurisdiction to review, as relevant here, removal orders under Title 8, Chapter 12). Nothing in the AEA forecloses judicial review of an alleged enemy alienâs claim that removal would be unlawful. Quite the opposite, Section 23 expressly provides for judicial review of claims raised by persons before the court. And the AEA, of course, is not part of Title 8, Chapter 12, and so is not subject to Section 1252(g)âs jurisdiction stripping. We recently reached that same conclusion in Huisha- Huisha. There, asylum seekers in detention in Texas challenged the Executiveâs use of 42 U.S.C. § 265, a public health statute, to expel them from the United States. 27 F.4th at 723-724, 726-727, 733. The asylum seekers argued that the use of Section 265 was âcontrary to lawâ under the APA and was improperly implemented by the agency. Compl. ¶¶ 74- 79, 83-84, 101-102, Huisha-Huisha v. Mayorkas, 27 F.4th 718 (D.C. Cir. 2022). The government did not argue that there was any jurisdictional impediment to APA review, and we found none. Plaintiffsâ suit here fits the APA bill as well. Instead of the Executive using Section 265 to justify removals, it relies on the Alien Enemies Act. But, because the AEA is outside Chapter 12 of the U.S. Code, plaintiffs may challenge their removals under the APA. 36 As the government does not dispute, venue for Plaintiffsâ APA claims is proper in the District of Columbia. It is the judicial district where defendantsâagencies and officers of the United Statesâreside. See 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e)(1) (âA civil action in which a defendant is an officer or employee of the United States or any agency thereof acting in his official capacity * * * may * * * be brought in any judicial district in which [] a defendant in the action resides[.]â). 8 c The governmentâs insistence that Plaintiffsâ claims can only proceed through habeas, and not under the APA, is not likely to succeed either. First, the government is wrong that âreview of AEA enforcement lies only in habeas[.]â Govât Second Stay Mot. 21. Our decision in Citizens Protective League shows otherwise. There, we entertained non-habeas âcivil actionsâ 8 Even if Section 1252(g) barred individual plaintiffs from relying on the APA to challenge their individual removals, it would not bar Plaintiffsâ class-wide challenge to the proceduresâor lack thereofâby which removals are being effectuated. Section 1252(g)âs reference to a âdecision or action[,]â 8 U.S.C. § 1252(g), âdescribes a single act rather than a group of decisions or a practice or procedure employed in making decisions.â Reno v. Catholic Soc. Servs., Inc., 509 U.S. 43, 56 (1993) (quoting McNary v. Haitian Refugee Center, Inc., 498 U.S. 479, 492 (1991) (analyzing similar language in 8 U.S.C. § 1255). That language therefore âdescribes the denial of an individual application,â and so âapplies only to review of denials of individual * * * applications.â Id. (quoting McNary, 498 U.S. 479 at 492). For that reason, both Reno and McNary found district courts had jurisdiction over class-wide challenges to the procedural implementation of immigration processes. Id. at 55-56; McNary, 498 U.S. at 491-494. 37 brought by 159 German nationals and a non-profit organization to challenge removals under the AEA. Citizens Protective League, 155 F.2d at 291. Outside the context of the AEA, the Supreme Court has also not required plaintiffs to use habeas when they do not challenge detention. The Court has never ârecognized habeas as the sole remedy where the relief sought would not terminate custody, accelerate the date of release, or reduce the custody level.â Skinner v. Switzer, 562 U.S. 521, 534 (2011). To the contrary, when the relief sought is simply to âstayâ in the United States, that relief âfalls outside the scope of the writ[.]â. Thuraissiggiam, 591 U.S. at 119. Second, the government relies on LoBue v. Christopher, 82 F.3d 1081 (D.C. Cir. 1996), to argue that, so long as Plaintiffs could have petitioned for habeas to secure the relief they seek, no other cause of action is available. Thuraissiggiam and Munaf establish that habeas relief is not available in this context, so the governmentâs LoBue argument is beside the point. LoBue is off point for another reason. In that case, two plaintiffs detained in Illinois for extradition to Canada filed habeas corpus actions in Illinois and then a separate APA suit in the District of Columbia. They argued that the extradition laws were unconstitutional. Id. at 1081-1083. This court rejected the plaintiffsâ attempt to make an end-run around habeas. Because success in their declaratory suit would have âpreclusive effectâ on their concurrently filed habeas petitions and so would secure their release from confinement, it did not matter that the plaintiffs did not âformally s[eek] a release from custodyâ in this court. Id. at 1083. 38 Plaintiffs, by contrast, are not manipulating anything. The governmentâs implementation of the Proclamation gave no individual notice or any time at all to file suit to challenge their removal. Only a swift class action could preserve the Plaintiffsâ legal rights before the rushed removals mooted their cases and thrust them into a Salvadorean prison. So success in this suit would not secure Plaintiffsâ release from U.S. custodyâthe remedy they could secure through habeas petitions. Success would maintain their federal custody. Even on its own terms, LoBue has no bearing on this case. LoBue concerned extradition, not removal, and this court specifically distinguished an extradition challenge from Supreme Court precedent âallowing an alien subject to a deportation order to seek relief by way of a declaratory judgment action.â 82 F.3d at 1083. IV On top of the threshold jurisdictional barriers to our appellate jurisdiction and to the governmentâs ability to succeed on the merits of its own jurisdictional objections to the district courtâs TROs, the other stay factors weigh against the government. One of the âmost criticalâ factors for a stay is âwhether the applicant will be irreparably injured[.]â Nken, 556 U.S. at 434. The governmentâs argument for irreparable injury does not hold up on this record. According to the government, the district courtâs TROs interfere with the Presidentâs authority to execute the law and to oversee foreign affairs. Yet the government conceded at oral argument that all Plaintiffs in the class are entitled to submit habeas petitions in the district of their confinement challenging 39 whether they are members of TdA. Oral Arg. 19:51-20:14, 56:16-56:26, 1:41:55-1:42:28, 1:42:50-1:43:12. Even assuming Plaintiffsâ claims to remain in detention could be pressed under habeas, any such habeas proceeding would allow them to obtain the same relief they seek hereâreview of their eligibility for removal under the Proclamation. And so the governmentâs preference for habeas proceedings would produce at least the same restriction on the Presidentâs authority to remove the Plaintiffs that the TROs impose. In other words, the Executive Branchâs asserted injury is actually just a dispute over which procedural vehicle is best situated for the Plaintiffsâ injunctive and declaratory claims. The Executive Branch prefers 300 or more individual habeas petitions in Texas and wherever else Plaintiffs are detained to this class APA case in Washington D.C. Regardless of whether the government is entitled to a different venue and procedural vehicle, an assertion of a âprocedural right in vacuoâ does not amount to irreparable injury warranting immediate emergency relief. Summers v. Earth Island Inst., 555 U.S. 488, 496 (2009). In addition, the TROs create no risk to the public. The TROs only prevent the Executive from removing alleged members of TdA who are already detained under the AEA. Second Minute Order (Mar. 15, 2025). The Executive remains free to take TdA members off the streets and keep them in detention. The Executive can also deport alleged members of TdA under the INA in expedited fashion if the government can prove they committed a serious crime, 8 U.S.C. § 1228(a), or are terrorists, 8 U.S.C. §§ 1531-1537. Finally, there is the more basic question of whether any of the Plaintiffs are, in fact, members of TdA. The Plaintiffs vigorously argue that they have nothing to do with this gang. 40 See ECF No. 3-3 (J.G.G. Decl.) ¶ 3; ECF No. 44-11 (Carney Decl. for G.F.F.) ¶ 3; ECF No. 44-12 (Smyth Decl. for J.A.V.) ¶¶ 9, 11; ECF No. 3-6 (W.G.H. Decl.) ¶ 12; ECF No. 44-9 (Shealy Decl. for J.G.O.) ¶ 4. 9 At the same time, the injury to the Plaintiffs is great and truly irreparable. They face immediate removal on grounds that they say have no application to them and yet their claims have never been heard. And the removals under the AEA thus far have been not to their home countries, but directly into a Salvadorean jail reported to have a notorious reputation for human rights abuses and disappearances. ASSOCIATED PRESS, What to know about CECOT, El Salvadorâs mega-prison for gang members, (Mar. 17, 2025), https://perma.cc/7WER- NB7G. Worst of all, the government has confessed that its preference that Plaintiffs use habeas corpus to challenge their eligibility for AEA removal is a phantasm: The governmentâs position at oral argument was that, the moment the district court TROs are lifted, it can immediately resume removal flights without affording Plaintiffs notice of the grounds for their removal or any opportunity to call a lawyer, let alone to file a writ of habeas corpus or obtain any review of their legal challenges to removal. Oral Arg. 1:44:04-1:45:51. It is irreparable injury to reduce to a shell game the basic lifeline of due process before an unprecedented and potentially irreversible removal occurs. 9 The lack of irreparable injury to the government is also the reason for denying the governmentâs request for mandamus relief. Mandamus is inappropriate when the normal appellate process is adequate to address the governmentâs injury. In re Flynn, 973 F.3d 74, 78 (D.C. Cir. 2020) (en banc) (âA petition for a writ of mandamus âmay never be employed as a substitute for appeal.ââ) (quoting Will v. United States, 389 U.S. 90, 97 (1967). 41 V Over one-hundred-and-fifty years ago, the Supreme Court addressed whether civilian courts could be closed just because the Executive declared an emergency. The Court said no. The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace, and covers with the shield of its protection all classes of men, at all times, and under all circumstances. No doctrine, involving more pernicious consequences, was ever invented by the wit of man than that any of its provisions can be suspended during any of the great exigencies of government. Ex parte Milligan, 71 U.S. 2, 120-121 (1866). The governmentâs removal scheme denies Plaintiffs even a gossamer thread of due process, even though the government acknowledges their right to judicial review of their removability. The district courtâs temporary restraining orders have appropriately frozen the status quo until an imminent motion for preliminary injunction is filed. The district court acted well within its discretion in doing so. We lack jurisdiction to review the governmentâs motion to stay those orders, and the governmentâs jurisdictional objections to the district courtâs actions do not raise a substantial question at this stage. For all of the foregoing reasons, I agree that the governmentâs motions for stays must be denied. WALKER, Circuit Judge, dissenting: Tren de Aragua is a violent criminal organization linked to Venezuela. The President invoked the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to remove its members from our country.1 Venezuelan nationals alleged to be members of this group were swiftly sent to a detention center in Texas for summary removal.2 Five individuals confined at that Texas facility quickly sued the President here in Washington, D.C. They say that the President exceeded his authority under the Act. They also say theyâre not members of Tren de Aragua.3 The two sides of this case agree on very little. But what is at this point uncontested is that âindividuals identified as alien enemies . . . may challenge that status in a habeas petition.â4 1 Presidential Proclamation, Invocation of the Alien Enemies Act Regarding the Invasion of The United States by Tren De Aragua (March 15, 2025) (the âProclamationâ) (citing the Alien Enemies Act, 50 U.S.C. § 21, et seq., 1 Stat. 577, 577-78 (1798)). 2 See Complaint, ECF 1, at 3-5 ¶¶ 9-13, J.G.G. et al. v. Trump, et al., No. 1:25-cv-00766 (D.D.C. Mar. 15, 2025). 3 See Plaintiffsâ Response to Motion to Vacate TRO, ECF 44, at 7 (âall five of the named Plaintiffs dispute that they are members of the TdA [i.e., Tren de Aragua].â (citing declarations)). 4 Governmentâs Reply in Support of Emergency Appeal, at 14; see also Oral Arg. at 17:38 â 21:33, available at youtube.com/live/4DoTLGECQSU. In other words, according to the Government, the door to the federal courthouse in Brownsville, Texas is open, and the Government has not represented that it will affirmatively prevent a detainee from seeking emergency habeas relief in his district of confinement if he tries to do so. In fact, despite the Governmentâs haste, and notwithstanding Plaintiffsâ allegations of underhanded conduct, deportees have managed nonetheless to file petitions for habeas corpus both here and in the Southern District of Texas. Cf. 2 The problem for the Plaintiffs is that habeas claims must be brought in the district where the Plaintiffs are confined. For the named Plaintiffs at least, that is the Southern District of Texas. Because the Plaintiffs sued in the District of Columbia, the Government is likely to succeed in its challenge to the district courtâs orders. The Government has also shown that the district courtâs orders threaten irreparable harm to delicate negotiations with foreign powers on matters concerning national security. And that harm, plus the asserted public interest in swiftly removing dangerous aliens, outweighs the Plaintiffsâ desire to file a suit in the District of Columbia that they concede they could have brought in Texas â and that longstanding legal principles regarding habeas require them to have brought in Texas. The Government has met its burden, so we should grant the stay pending appeal. I. The District Courtâs Orders Are Appealable Orders. We must have jurisdiction before we consider an appeal. Temporary restraining orders ordinarily arenât appealable.5 But the district courtâs extraordinary orders here are. I.M. v. United States Customs & Border Protection, 67 F.4th 436, 444 (D.C. Cir. 2023) (brief custody of a few weeks would not âall but prevent judicial review of expedited removal ordersâ). 5 OPM v. American Federation of Government Employees, AFL- CIO, 473 U.S. 1301, 1303-04 (1985) (âdenials of temporary restraining orders are ordinarily not appealableâ). Itâs fair to ask why this is âthe established rule.â Id. After all, we have appellate jurisdiction to review orders âgranting . . . injunctions, or refusing to dissolve or modify injunctions,â 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), and âTROs almost certainly fall within the historical 3 Operating under intense time pressure, the district court granted a temporary restraining order preventing the removal of the named plaintiffs, then quickly certified a class of âall noncitizens in U.S. custody who are subject to the . . . Proclamation,â6 and then granted a temporary restraining order that âenjoinedâ the Government âfrom removing members of [that] class.â7 Together, these orders amounted to an injunction that halted the Presidentâs effort to implement his Proclamation â the success of which depends on âdelicate negotiationsâ with âforeign interlocutors.â8 The district courtâs extraordinary injunctions are appealable. Although the district court âstyledâ each of them as âa temporary restraining order,â that âlabel . . . is not decisive.â9 What matters is what it did. And far from âmerely and modern definitions of âinjunction.ââ Tyler B. Lindley, Morgan Bronson & Wesley White, Appealing Temporary Restraining Orders (BYU Law Research Paper No. 25-06), 77 Fla. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2025) (manuscript at 3), https://perma.cc/Q2JB-FC93. It appears likely that the rule is no product of âtextualist reasoning,â but rather a vestige of case law dissociated from important statutory history. Id. Even so, weâre bound by that case law until the Supreme Court tells us otherwise. 6 Minute Order Granting Motion for Class Certification. 7 Id. 8 Governmentâs Emergency Motion for a Stay Pending Appeal at 26- 27 ¶¶ 2-4 (Declaration of Michael G. Kozak). 9 Adams v. Vance, 570 F.2d 950, 953 (D.C. Cir. 1978) (quoting Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2962, at 619 (1973)). Relatedly, district courts have halted executive actions under the guise of âadministrative stays.â See, e.g., Minute Order, Dellinger v. Bessent, No. 25-cv-385 (D.D.C. Feb. 10, 2025) (administrative stay reinstating terminated official). But again, what matters is not how an order is labeled, but how it functions. These so-called 4 preserv[ing] the status quo pending further proceedings,â the district courtâs orders affirmatively interfered with an ongoing, partially overseas, national-security operation.10 In Adams v. Vance, we held that when a district courtâs temporary order threatens âintrusion on executive discretion in the field of foreign policy,â its order is immediately reviewable.11 Thatâs the case here. The district court told the Executive Branch to immediately stop executing a plan to repatriate or remove Venezuelan nationals pursuant to â[a]rrangements [that] were recently reachedâ with El Salvador and ârepresentatives of the Maduro regime.â12 Not only that, the district court âcommanded an unprecedented actionâ from the bench: The district judge ordered aircraft to be turned around mid-flight in the middle of this sensitive ongoing national-security operation.13 ââadministrative staysâ are not actually stays at all, administrative or otherwise. They are injunctions.â Chris D. Moore, So-Called âAdministrative Staysâ in Trump 2.0, 104 Tex. L. Rev. Online (forthcoming 2025) (manuscript at 3), https://perma.cc/6DUP-9N7P. 10 Adams, 570 F.2d at 952. 11 Id. 12 Kozak Declaration ¶ 3. 13 Class Certification Hearing Tr. at 43:12-15, 43:18-19 (Mar. 15, 2025) (â[A]ny plane containing [putative plaintiff class members] that is going to take off or is in the air needs to be returned to the United States . . . . [T]hose people need to be returned to the United States. . . . [T]his is something that you need to make sure is complied with immediately.â); cf. Al-Bihani v. Obama, 619 F.3d 1, 12 n.1 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (en banc) (Kavanaugh, J., concurring) (âEven when this Court might disagree with a District Court decision, that disagreement is with respect and appreciation for the dedicated work of the District Court on these matters.â). 5 âWhen an order directs action so potent with consequences so irretrievable, we provide an immediate appeal to protect the rights of the parties.â14 The district courtâs orders here threaten an âirreversibl[e] altering [of] the delicate diplomatic balanceâ that high-level Executive officials recently struck with foreign powers.15 In a sworn declaration, the Senior Bureau Official for Western Hemisphere Affairs tells us, based on his âextensive experience since 1971 engaging inâ diplomacy involving âEl Salvador, Venezuela, and other countries in the region,â that there is a serious risk that our diplomatic counterparts will âchange their minds regarding their willingness to accept certain individuals associated with [Tren de Aragua].â16 He also flags the risk that foreign negotiators will âseek to leverageâ the delay âas an ongoing issue.â17 As weâve cautioned before, â[c]ourts must beware âignoring the delicacies of diplomatic negotiation.ââ18 So we canât ignore a declaration warning that these âharms could arise 14 Adams, 570 F.2d at 953; see also Dellinger v. Bessent, No. 25- 5028, 2025 WL 559669, at *13 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 15, 2025) (Katsas, J., dissenting) (âTROs themselves sometimes inflict irreparable injury, and in those cases an immediate appeal is available to avoid it.â). 15 Adams, 570 F.2d at 953; see Kozak Declaration ¶¶ 2-3 (explaining that Secretary of State and other high-ranking White House and State Department officials ânegotiated at the highest levels with the Government of El Salvador and with Nicolas Maduro and his representatives in Venezuela in recent weeksâ). 16 Kozak Declaration ¶¶ 1, 4. 17 Id. ¶ 4. 18 Adams, 570 F.2d at 954 (quoting Mitchell v. Laird, 488 F.2d 611, 616 (D.C. Cir. 1973)). 6 even in the short term.â19 Itâs no answer, therefore, to say that the district courtâs temporary restraining orders last only 14 days (or perhaps another 14 days after that).20 Thatâs more than enough time to frustrate fast-moving international negotiations. In sum, the âextraordinary character of the order[s] at issue here . . . warrant[ ] immediate appellate review.â21 * * * There remains one procedural wrinkle to iron out before turning to the merits. A stay applicant must âordinarily move first in the district courtâ for a stay pending appeal.22 But here the Government didnât do so. That doesnât preclude our review. The Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure expressly provide that an applicant may bypass that step if it shows âthat moving first in the district court would be impracticable.â23 Here, the Government cited extremely exigent circumstances that made it âimpracticableâ to move first in the district court.24 And it filed emergency motions in our Court mere hours after each temporary restraining order issued â a testament to its view of the harm 19 Kozak Declaration ¶ 4. 20 See Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(b)(2) (district court may, âfor good cause,â âextendâ a 14-day TRO for âa like periodâ). 21 Dellinger, 2025 WL 559669, at *12 (Katsas, J., dissenting). 22 Fed. R. App. P. 8(a)(1)(A). 23 Id. R. 8(a)(2)(A)(ii); see also D.C. Cir. R. 8(a) (âmotion seeking emergency relief must state whether such relief was previously requested from the district court and the ruling on that requestâ). 24 See First Emergency Stay Motion, at 4 n.1 (citing the âimportance of the issues involvedâ and âthe fast-moving nature of this caseâ); Second Emergency Stay Motion, at 8 n.1 (same). 7 that the temporary restraining orders inflict on the Executive Branch every hour that they remain in effect.25 The Governmentâs sidestepping of the district court under these circumstances is no impediment to our review.26 Because this appeal is properly before us, I now consider the stay factors, beginning with the Governmentâs likelihood of success on the merits.27 II. The Government Is Likely To Succeed On The Merits Because The Plaintiffs Cannot Sue In The District of Columbia. The Government is likely to succeed on appeal for a technical, but important, reason: The Plaintiffsâ claims sound in habeas, and habeas petitions must be brought where detainees are held. For the five named Plaintiffs, that is the Southern District of Texas. 25 The district court issued the first TRO (applicable only to the named plaintiffs) at 9:40 AM, and the Government filed its 15-page emergency stay motion at 3:05 PM â less than six hours later. The district courtâs second TRO issued at 7:25 PM, and the Government filed its 22-page emergency stay motion, plus a two-page State Department declaration, at 1:04 AM â less than five hours later. 26 Even if the Governmentâs approach were procedurally irregular, the Plaintiffs have forfeited that argument by failing to raise it. See generally Plaintiffsâ Brief in Response to Stay Motion. 27 Nken v. Holder, 556 U.S. 418, 425-26 (2009) (stay factors: â(1) whether the stay applicant has made a strong showing that he is likely to succeed on the merits; (2) whether the applicant will be irreparably injured absent a stay; (3) whether issuance of the stay will substantially injure the other parties interested in the proceeding; and (4) where the public interest liesâ). 8 A. The Plaintiffsâ Proper Cause Of Action Is A Habeas Petition. The Plaintiffsâ complaint raises various claims for relief. But whatâs their âcause of actionâ?28 On what basis do they invoke federal courtsâ remedial power? Many of the Plaintiffsâ claims rely on the Administrative Procedure Act. The APA provides a cause of action to anyone âsuffering legal wrong because of agency action.â29 The Plaintiffs allege that the Presidentâs Proclamation is âcontrary to lawâ under the APA, because it stretches the meaning of the Alien Enemies Act and violates several other statutes.30 28 Cf. Trudeau v. FTC, 456 F.3d 178, 188 n.15 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (âa âcause of actionâ [is] the legal authority (e.g., the APA) that permits the court to provide redress for a particular kind of âclaim.ââ). 29 See 5 U.S.C. § 702 (âA person suffering legal wrong because of agency action, or adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute, is entitled to judicial review thereof.â). Plaintiffsâ eighth claim for relief asserts their rights under the Fifth Amendmentâs Due Process Clause. Complaint, ECF 1, at 22 ¶¶ 101- 04. Though âwe have long held that federal courts may in some circumstances grant injunctive relief . . . with respect to violations of federal law by federal officials,â that cause of action is not available when a habeas petition is available. Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center, Inc., 575 U.S. 320, 326-27 (2015); see also Preiser v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 475, 489-90 (1973). 30 Complaint, ECF 1, at 17 ¶¶ 71-73 (citing 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A)); id. at 19-20 ¶¶ 97-100 (same); id. at 19 ¶ 83 (same); id. at 17-18 ¶ 86 (same); id. at 18 ¶¶ 78-79 (same); id. at 20 ¶ 90 (same). 9 Implementing the Proclamation, they add, is âarbitrary and capriciousâ â the quintessential APA challenge.31 But the APA is not the right vehicle for two reasons. First, it provides review only when there is âno other adequate remedy in a court.â32 As I will explain below, another avenue for review is available here â a petition for habeas corpus. Second, the Proclamation here is not an âagency action.â It is a Presidential Proclamation. And the âPresident is not an agency.â33 So the APA does not authorize review of the Proclamation. Where the âfinal action complained of is that of the Presidentâ â here, the Presidentâs Proclamation under the Alien Enemies Act â the APA does not provide a basis for judicial review.34 How are the Plaintiffs supposed to bring their claims for relief, if not via the APA? The answer appears in the very title of their own complaint: âPETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS 31 Id. at 20-21 ¶¶ 93-95 (still citing 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A)). Plaintiffs made sure to âexcept Defendant Trumpâ from this claim for relief, which is titled âViolation of the Administrative Procedure Act.â 32 5 U.S.C. § 704. 33 Franklin v. Massachusetts, 505 U.S. 788, 796 (1992). 34 Id. The Plaintiffs might respond that part of their complaint challenges lower-level decisions by executive officials about whether a particular plaintiff is a member of Tren de Aragua â a decision not made by the President. But that type of challenge is unique to each plaintiff, so it would seem that a class action is a poor vehicle for that type of challenge. 10 CORPUS.â35 In that complaint, âPlaintiffs respectfully pray this Court to . . . Grant a writ of habeas corpus to Plaintiffs that enjoins Defendants from removing them under the [Alien Enemies Act].â36 Regardless of whether that would have been a paradigmatic habeas claim when habeas was first developed, it is now. The Plaintiffs face imminent removal by Proclamation of the Executive. They resort to court to challenge the legal and factual grounds for their threatened removal. And if they win the argument, they cannot be summarily removed. âAt its historical core, the writ of habeas corpusâ serves âas a means of reviewing the legality of Executive detention.â37 Indeed, its most central âhistoric purposeâ was âto relieve detention by executive authorities without judicial trial.â38 This âgreat and efficacious writâ did so by requiring the custodian to âproduce the body of the prisonerâ to the âjudge or courtâ and provide a âsatisfactory excuseâ for the prisonerâs detention.39 35 Complaint, ECF 1, at 1; see 28 U.S.C. § 2241 (federal habeas statute). 36 Id. at 21. 37 INS v. St. Cyr, 533 U.S. 289, 301 (2001), abrogated on other grounds by statute, see REAL ID Act of 2005, 119 Stat. 310, 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(5); Nasrallah v. Barr, 590 U.S. 573, 580 (2020) (acknowledging St. Cyrâs statutory abrogation). 38 St. Cyr, 533 U.S. at 301 (quoting Brown v. Allen, 344 U.S. 443, 533 (1953)) (emphasis added). 39 Sir William Blackstone, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND 687-88 (Chase, ed. 1882). 11 As Blackstone put it, the great writ remedies âall manner of illegal confinement.â40 So habeas is used to challenge the place of confinement. Consider In re Bonner.41 There, the Supreme Court granted habeas to a petitioner who was subject to imprisonment on a valid jury verdict.42 Bonnerâs only complaint was that he was âunlawfully deprived of his libertyâ by his placement in the wrong penitentiary. (By statute, he should have been imprisoned somewhere else.) That Bonner could (and should) have been confined elsewhere was no impediment to seeking a writ of habeas corpus. Indeed, the Court even said that â[t]o deny the writ of habeas corpus in such a caseâ would be âa virtual suspension of [the writ].â43 After all, âa place of confinement challenge . . . unquestionably sounds in habeas.â44 40 Id. at 687 (emphasis added); see also DHS v. Thuraissigiam, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1981 (2020) (âThe writ of habeas corpus as it existed at common law provided a vehicle to challenge all manner of detention by government officials, and the Court had held long before that the writ could be invoked by aliens already in the country who were held in custody pending deportation.â). As an aside, Thuraissigiam is of no help to the Plaintiffs here. Thuraissigiam was not making a core habeas challenge to his removal; instead, he was seeking affirmative administrative relief. See Thuraissigiam, 140 S. Ct. at 1969-71, 1974, 1981 (rejecting a petitionerâs âvery different attempted use of the writâ to seek âquite different reliefâ than traditionally available in habeas â namely, the âauthorization for an alien to remain in a country other than his ownâ and âto obtain administrative or judicial review leading to that resultâ). 41 151 U.S. 242, 262 (1894). 42 See In re Bonner, 151 U.S. 242, 262 (1894). 43 Id. at 259-60 (emphasis added). 44 Aamer v. Obama, 742 F.3d 1023, 1035 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (emphasis added); see, e.g., Creek v. Stone, 379 F.2d 106, 109 (D.C. Cir. 1967) 12 Another use of habeas is to challenge transfer from one place of detention to a different location. For instance, in Kiyemba v. Obama, Guantanamo detainees challenged â in habeas â their anticipated transfer to another country.45 We deemed âa potential transfer out of the jurisdictionâ to be âa proper subject of statutory habeas relief,â and we rejected an argument by the Government that âthe right to challenge a transfer is âancillaryâ to and not at the âcoreâ of habeas corpus relief.â46 If habeas was the proper cause of action there â where detainees feared continued detention after removal â habeas is all the more the proper cause of action here, where the Plaintiffs will continue to be detained after removal.47 To be sure, Kiyemba did not grant habeas relief. But that is because the detainees failed âon the merits of their present claim.â48 That decision was controlled by Munaf v. Geren.49 Munaf was in Iraq and had broken Iraqi law, and the U.S. was planning to transfer him from U.S. custody to Iraqi (âhabeas corpus is available not only to an applicant who claims he is entitled to be freed of all restraints, but also to an applicant who protests his confinement in a certain place.â (emphases added)); id. at 108-11 (habeas appropriate for statutory challenge to convicted juvenileâs confinement in a receiving home rather than an appropriate psychiatric facility); Miller v. Overholser, 206 F.2d 415 (D.C. Cir. 1953) (habeas petition brought by a man confined to a ward for the criminally insane who said he belonged instead in an institution for the mentally ill). 45 561 F.3d 509, 511 (D.C. Cir. 2009). 46 Id. at 513. 47 See id. (âlikelyâ to be detained). 48 Id. at 514. 49 553 U.S. 674 (2008). 13 custody. The Supreme Court first held that the lower court had habeas jurisdiction. The Court then held that, on the merits, the habeas claim failed because the Court could not interfere with a foreign criminal system. In other words, on the merits of whether the transfer was lawful, it was lawful because Iraq had âexclusive jurisdiction to punish offenses against its laws committed within its borders.â50 Munafâs reason for denying the habeas petition was not that habeas cannot be used to enjoin a detaineeâs transfer as a general matter. If habeas was not the proper vehicle to bring the merits claim opposing the transfer in Munaf, the Court would not have been able to do what it did â reach the merits of that habeas claim.51 Myriad cases also show that challenges to extradition and deportation are properly brought in habeas. In LoBue v. Christopher, we said habeas was a vehicle to challenge extradition statutes, as had the Supreme Court over a century earlier.52 Regardless of changes to immigration statutes, habeas has long been used to bring removal challenges â indeed, â[u]ntil the enactment of the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act,â âbringing a habeas corpus action in district 50 Id. at 697. 51 Cf. In re Bonner, 151 U.S. 242, 262 (1894) (granting habeas writ to petitioner who claimed he was imprisoned in the wrong penitentiary). 52 82 F.3d 1081, 1082-84 (D.C. Cir. 1996); Ward v. Rutherford, 921 F.2d 286, 288 (D.C. Cir. 1990) (Ginsburg, R.B., J.) (âactions taken by magistrates in international extradition matters are subject to habeas corpus review by an Article III district judgeâ); Benson v. McMahon, 127 U.S. 457, 462 (1888) (habeas used to challenge to extradition). 14 courtâ was âthe sole means by which an alien could test the legality of his or her deportation order.â53 The upshot is that habeas and removal challenges go hand- in-glove, and statutory developments since the late nineteenth century do not affect this key point.54 Thatâs because the summary removals challenged here are premised upon the Presidentâs authority under an eighteenth-century law. That law has not been repealed, expressly or impliedly, by later immigration laws. And the specific controls the general.55 It is noteworthy that the few Alien Enemies Act cases on the books almost invariably arose through habeas petitions: Both of the two Alien Enemies Act cases to reach the Supreme Court â Ludecke v. Watkins and Ahrens v. Clark â arose via habeas petitions.56 In Ahrens, for example, the Supreme Court held that District of Columbia federal courts had no jurisdiction to hear habeas claims challenging confinement in New York for deportation to Germany under the Alien Enemies Act.57 53 St. Cyr, 533 U.S. at 306; see also Heikkila v. Barber, 345 U.S. 229, 235 (1953) (rejecting challenge to deportation order under the APA because plaintiff âmay attack a deportation order only by habeas corpusâ). 54 Cf. DHS v. Thuraissigiam, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1971-75 (2020) (looking to the historical understanding of the scope of the writ as the touchstone for Suspension Clause analysis). 55 See Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 183 (2012). 56 See generally Ludecke v. Watkins, 335 U.S. 160 (1948); Ahrens v. Clark, 335 U.S. 188 (1948). 57 335 U.S. at 192-93 (âthe jurisdiction of the District Court to issue the writ in cases such as this [i.e., AEA habeas petitions] is restricted to those petitioners who are confined or detained within the territorial jurisdiction of the courtâ). A later case, Braden v. 30th Judicial Circuit Court of Kentucky, 410 U.S. 484 (1973), overturned part of 15 Likewise, for cases in the lower courts, habeas was often the vehicle for aliens designated as enemies to challenge their designation and prevent their removal.58 That may explain why the Plaintiffs here titled their complaint a âpetition for habeas corpus,â and asked the district court to â[g]rant a writ of habeas corpus . . . that enjoins Defendants from removing them under the [Alien Enemies Act].â59 B. The District Of Columbia Is Not The Proper Location For This Suit Because Of The Habeas-Channeling Rule And Habeasâ District-of-Confinement Rule. At the district courtâs suggestion, the Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their habeas claims. Thatâs because habeas claims must be brought where the petitioner is confined, and the Plaintiffs are not confined in the District of Columbia. But merely dismissing the claims â even erasing the words âhabeas corpusâ from the complaint â does not rescue the Plaintiffsâ complaint. Thatâs because of two important Ahrens, but Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 542 U.S. 426 (2004), makes clear that Ahrensâs core holding remains good law. See Padilla, 542 U.S. at 443 (âfor core habeas petitions challenging present physical confinement, jurisdiction lies in only one district: the district of confinementâ). 58 See, e.g., Kaminer v. Clark, 177 F.2d 51 (D.C. Cir. 1949); United States ex rel. Schlueter v. Watkins, 67 F. Supp. 556 (S.D.N.Y.), affâd, 158 F.2d 853 (2d Cir. 1946). But cf. Citizens Protective League v. Clark, 155 F.2d 290 (D.C. Cir. 1946) (claims not characterized as habeas, but habeas issue neither raised nor addressed). 59 Complaint, ECF 1, at 1, 23 ¶ f (Prayer for Relief). 16 rules: the âhabeas-channeling ruleâ and the âdistrict of confinement rule.â First, the âhabeas-channeling ruleâ requires core habeas claims, like the Plaintiffsâ claims, to be brought in habeas.60 Importantly, that means they must bring their claims in compliance with habeasâs unique procedural requirements. As the Supreme Court has explained, if plaintiffs could resort to âthe simple expedient of putting a different label on their pleadingsâ â framing their challenges as § 1983 claims, for instance â they could effectively âevadeâ these procedural requirements.61 The habeas-channeling rule shuts the door to that kind of gamesmanship.62 The second relevant habeas rule is the âdistrict of confinement rule.â63 That rule says that habeas claims must be 60 See Nance v. Ward, 142 S. Ct. 2214, 2222 (2022) (âthis Court has held that an inmate must proceed in habeas when the relief he seeks would necessarily imply the invalidity of his conviction or sentenceâ (cleaned up) (emphasis added)); Preiser v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 475, 489-90 (1973) (plaintiffs canât âevadeâ habeas procedural requirements âby the simple expedient of putting a different label on their pleadingsâ); Dufur v. United States Parole Commission, 34 F.4th 1090, 1095 (D.C. Cir. 2022) (â[T]he sole remedy for assertedly unlawful incarceration is through habeas corpus.â). 61 Preiser, 411 U.S. at 489-90; see Dafur, 34 F.4th at 1095 (explaining that Preiserâs âhabeas-channeling ruleâ prevents detained plaintiffs from âcreate[ing] a workaround to the habeas requirementsâ). 62 Dafur, 34 F.4th at 1095. 63 Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 542 U.S. 426, 443 (2004) (âfor core habeas petitions challenging present physical confinement, jurisdiction lies in only one district: the district of confinement.â); cf. I.M., 67 F.4th at 444 (âCreating exceptions to jurisdictional rules is a job for Congress, not the courts.â). 17 brought in the specific district where the plaintiff alleges that he is illegally confined.64 Itâs âderived from the terms of the habeas statute,â which specifies that âDistrict courts are limited to granting habeas relief âwithin their respective jurisdictions.ââ65 And it âserves the important purpose of preventing forum shopping by habeas petitioners,â who could otherwise âname a high-level supervisory official as respondent and then sue that person wherever he is amenable to long-arm jurisdictionâ â for example, in Washington, D.C.66 Though the extradition context is not perfectly analogous to the removal context, this courtâs decision in LoBue v. Christopher illustrates these principles.67 The plaintiffs there wanted to stop the United States from extraditing them to Canada. They were held in the Northern District of Illinois, but they sued for declaratory relief and an injunction in the District of Columbia. We held that we lacked jurisdiction to consider their case because of âthe availability . . . of habeas relief elsewhere.â68 We explained that the âavailability of a habeas remedy in another district ousted us of jurisdiction over an 64 Id. Relatedly, âthe proper respondent to a habeas petition is âthe person who has custody over the petitioner,ââ id. at 434 (cleaned up) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2242) â the âimmediate custodian rule,â id. at 446. âTogether,â the district-of-confinement rule and the immediate- custodian rule âcompose a simple rule that has been consistently applied in the lower courts . . . : Whenever a § 2241 habeas petitioner seeks to challenge his present physical custody within the United States, he should name his warden as respondent and file the petition in the district of confinement.â Id. at 447. 65 Id. (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2241(a)). 66 Id. 67 82 F.3d 1081 (D.C. Cir. 1996). 68 Id. at 1082. 18 alienâs effort to pose a constitutional attack on his pending deportation by means of a suit for declaratory judgment.â69 There as here, the âplaintiffsâ focus [was] not explicitly on their present custody.â70 There as here, the plaintiffs tried to avoid the habeas-channeling rule by âclaim[ing] that the nature of the relief requested is different hereâ than in habeas suits âsince they have not formally sought a release from custody as in the habeas action. But we have rejected precisely such efforts to manipulate the preclusive effect of habeas jurisdiction.â71 * * * To sum up, the Plaintiffsâ claims sound in habeas because the Plaintiffs challenge the legal and factual bases for their imminent removal â a habeas claim. That claim must be brought in the district of confinement. The named Plaintiffs 69 Id.; see also id. at 1084 (addressing Kaminer v. Clark, 177 F.2d 51 (D.C. Cir. 1949), and explaining that though Kaminerâs precise holding had been overruled in 1955, âKaminerâs logic controls for persons who, like the plaintiffs, have access to the habeas remedyâ). 70 Id. at 1083; see also Monk v. Secretary of Navy, 793 F.2d 364, 366 (D.C. Cir. 1986) (âIt is immaterial that Monk has not requested immediate release.â); cf. Wilkinson v. Dotson, 544 U.S. 74, 83 (2005) (â[W]e believe that a case challenging a sentence seeks a prisonerâs âreleaseâ in the only pertinent sense: It seeks invalidation (in whole or in part) of the judgment authorizing the prisonerâs confinement; the fact that the State may seek a new judgment (through a new trial or a new sentencing proceeding) is beside the point . . . .â (emphasis added)). 71 LoBue, 82 F.3d at 1083; see also Monk, 793 F.2d at 366 (âHe may not avoid the requirement that he proceed by habeas corpus by adding a request for relief that may not be made in a petition for habeas corpus.â); see also Ahrens, 335 U.S. 192-93. 19 here are all confined in Raymondville, Texas, which is in the federal Southern District of Texas. Therefore, that is where they must file. III. The Government Satisfies The Remaining Stay Factors. The Government has shown that it is irreparably harmed by the district courtâs orders. As explained above, a career State Department official has declared that the orders âharm[]â the âforeign policy of the United Statesâ by jeopardizing the status of âintensive and delicateâ negotiations with El Salvador and the Maduro regime in Venezuela. The orders risk the possibility that those foreign actors will change their minds about allowing the United States to remove Tren de Aragua members to their countries. Even if they donât change their minds, it gives them leverage to negotiate for better terms. âThese harms could arise even in the short term.â72 Reinforcing the State Department officialâs declaration is the irreparable harm that is all but inevitable when a court interferes with an ongoing national-security operation that is overseas or partially overseas. The Plaintiffsâ counsel at oral argument could not identify an order of that kind, outside of the habeas context, that survived appellate review.73 There are perhaps some that could be found, but they may be more cautionary tales than models to be emulated.74 72 Kozak Declaration ¶ 4. 73 Cf. Boumediene v. Bush, 553 U.S. 723 (2008) (habeas context). 74 Cf. Schlesinger v. Holtzman, 414 U.S. 1321, 1322 (1973) (staying order to halt the bombing of Cambodia); Ramirez de Arellano v. Weinberger, 745 F.2d 1500, 1550-51 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (âIn Old Testament days, when judges ruled the people 20 The Plaintiffs might respond that the same harm to foreign affairs and national security would follow from certification of a habeas class action in Texas. But the Government has not conceded that the Plaintiffs can certify a habeas class. All the Government has conceded is that individual habeas petitions can be brought in Texas. Whether the plaintiffs can certify a class and whether that class is entitled to relief is for a federal district court in Texas to decide.75 of Israel and led them into battle, a court professing the belief that it could order a halt to a military operation in foreign lands might not have been a startling phenomenon. But in modern times, and in a country where such governmental functions have been committed to elected delegates of the people, such an assertion of jurisdiction is extraordinary. The courtâs decision today reflects a willingness to extend judicial power into areas where we do not know, and have no way of finding out, what serious harm we may be doing. The case before us could not conceivably warrant such unprecedented action.â); see also Warren Weaver, Jr., Douglas Upholds Halt In Bombing But Is Overruled, N.Y. TIMES (Aug. 5, 1973). 75 Nken, 556 U.S. at 434. Whether Plaintiffs can seek habeas relief through a class action in the Southern District of Texas seems to be an open question for that court to resolve in the first instance. See Jennings v. Rodriguez, 583 U.S. 281, 324 (2018) (Thomas, J., concurring) (âThis Court has never addressed whether habeas relief can be pursued in a class action.â); St. Jules v. Savage, 512 F.2d 881 (5th Cir. 1975) (expressing no âview as to . . . the propriety of [a habeas] class actionâ); Lynn v. Davis, 2019 WL 570770 (S.D. Tex. 2019) (âEven if habeas claims may be pursued in a class action, . . . .â (emphasis added)). But cf. Gross v. Quarterman, No. CIV.A. H-04-136, 2007 WL 4411755, at *3 (S.D. Tex. Dec. 17, 2007) (âa class action . . . is not available in a habeas petition.â) (dictum); Cook v. Hanberry, 592 F.2d 248 (5th Cir. 1979). 21 As for any irreparable harm to the Plaintiffs, they conceded at oral argument that they can seek all the relief in Texas that they have sought in the District of Columbia. So requiring them to sue in Texas does not impose on them irreparable harm. Finally, as for the public interest, it favors the Government. As explained, sensitive matters of foreign affairs and national security are at stake.76 And whatever public interest exists for the Plaintiffs to have their day in court, they can have that day in court where the rules of habeas require them to bring their suit â in Texas. IV. Conclusion Deportees are already petitioning for habeas corpus in Texas.77 At least one petitioner has already secured a hearing date in the Southern District of Texas, plus a TRO preventing his removal in the interim.78 According to the Government, thatâs exactly what Plaintiffs here should have done and still can. The district court here in Washington, D.C. â 1,475 miles from the El Valle Detention Facility in Raymondville, Texas 76 Cf. Kiyemba, 561 F.3d at 519 (Kavanaugh, J., concurring). 77 See, e.g., Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, ECF 1, Zacarias Matos v. Venegas et al., No. 1:25-CV-00057 (S.D. Tex. March 15, 2025); Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, ECF 1, Gil Rojas v. Venegas et al., No. 1:25-CV-00056 (S.D. Tex. March 14, 2025). 78 Minute Order, ECF 4, Gil Rojas v. Venegas et al., No. 1:25-CV- 00056 (S.D. Tex. March 14, 2025) (âIT IS ORDERED that Respondents shall NOT physically remove Petitioner Adrian Gil Rojas from the United States until the Courtâs resolution of the writ of habeas corpus . . . .â); id. (ordering the Government to respond by this Friday, March 28, 2025, and setting a hearing for April 9, 2025). 22 â is not the right court to hear the Plaintiffsâ claims. The Government likely faces irreparable harm to ongoing, highly sensitive international diplomacy and national-security operations. The Plaintiffs, meanwhile, need only file for habeas in the proper court to seek appropriate relief. The Government has met its burden to make âa strong showing that [it] is likely to succeed on the meritsâ and that it âwill be irreparably injured absent a stay.â79 The issuance of the stay willâ not âsubstantially injure the other parties interested in the proceeding.â80 And âthe public interest liesâ with a stay.81 Therefore, I would grant its motion for a stay pending appeal. I respectfully dissent. 79 Nken, 556 U.S. at 426. 80 Id. 81 Id.
Case Information
- Court
- D.C. Cir.
- Decision Date
- March 26, 2025
- Status
- Precedential