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Alito Sotomayor Courtroom Disagreement Shatters Supreme Court Civility Norms: “There Is Much I Would Have Added” Fired Back Alito After Sotomayor Called His Asylum Ruling “Egregiously Wrong” From the Bench

Alito Sotomayor Courtroom Disagreement Shatters Supreme Court Civility Norms: "There Is Much I Would Have Added" Fired Back Alito After Sotomayor Called His Asylum Ruling "Egregiously Wrong" From the Bench

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Published by TrenBuzz.com | June 25, 2026 | BREAKING SUPREME COURT


Key Points at a Glance – Alito Sotomayor Courtroom Disagreement


Alito Sotomayor Courtroom Disagreement: What the Ruling in Mullin v. Al Otro Lado Actually Does

The Supreme Court’s 6-3 conservative majority handed the Trump administration yet another win in the president’s efforts to crack down on immigration, clearing the way to restore a policy of limiting the number of people who can apply for asylum each day.

Writing for the majority, Justice Alito called the question a “straightforward” one, writing that “in ordinary speech, no one would say that a person ‘arrives in’ a place before the person enters that place.”


Sotomayor Fires Back With a Historical Warning Nobody Expected

Sotomayor warned in her oral dissent: “More people will die. More people will be forced to walk along the US-Mexico border in dangerous conditions, trying to find a port that will inspect them. More people will turn back and be subjected to violence because of something they cannot change about themselves, such as their race, religion, nationality, or political opinion.”

According to SCOTUSblog, bench responses to oral dissents are highly unusual, with the closest historical precedent coming in Glossip v. Gross in 2015 when Justice Antonin Scalia delivered a short rebuttal after Justice Breyer’s oral dissent.


[Also Read: “Ketanji Brown Jackson: The Supreme Court’s Most Consistent Dissenter in 2026” | TrenBuzz.com] 🔗 [“Supreme Court Rules Government Cannot Restrict Gun Rights for Marijuana Users” | TrenBuzz.com]


Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and news reporting purposes only. All quotes and courtroom details are sourced from NBC News, SCOTUSblog, The Hill, The Daily Beast, RedState, HotAir, Boston Globe, CNN, and ECIKS as of June 25, 2026. TrenBuzz.com does not provide legal advice. Readers are encouraged to follow official Supreme Court records and credible news sources for the latest updates.

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