Citizenship and migration DNU declared unconstitutional June 30th 2026

Che1990

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Wow, that's awesome. So are we looking at it all going back to pre DNU rules? Like marriage to citizenship, etc.
 
This is not an unconstitutionality that has effects only in one file, this is a nullification. The effect is the DNU never existed. This is like you want to sell someone else appartment, the contracts you sign not being the owner has no legal value. Behind this precedent is a political struggle between Federal Courts, Electoral Courts and DNM.
 
Excellent news and not far behind the US Supreme Court's denial of Trumps attack on Jus Solis citizenship. I hope it serves to teach both of these egotists that the executive branch is not above the legislative process.
 
This is not an unconstitutionality that has effects only in one file, this is a nullification. The effect is the DNU never existed. This is like you want to sell someone else appartment, the contracts you sign not being the owner has no legal value. Behind this precedent is a political struggle between Federal Courts, Electoral Courts and DNM.
So like completed null and void now ?
 
Excellent news and not far behind the US Supreme Court's denial of Trumps attack on Jus Solis citizenship. I hope it serves to teach both of these egotists that the executive branch is not above the legislative process.
My guess: they know these things will be struck down, but for a couple years they enjoy a power their office doesn't normally permit. Think of all those people Trump sent to El Salvador. Are they still there? People affected by Milei's DNU the past year aren't getting compensated; If they skipped their sister's wedding or their dad's funeral there's no redo.
Their supporters don't care if it's legal or not (or will blame the judge's bias for a ruling they don't like).
It's the "move fast, break things" style of governing. Very silicon valley.
For example, people sued OpenAI when they used copyrighted materials as training data, and the LLMs produce results that would violate copyright law if a human did them. Those cases are STILL working their way through courts, nowhere near a decision, and the tech guys now have enough money for endless appeals.
It's just how things are done now.
 
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