Immigration Courts Face Steep Judge Shortage After 25% Drop in One Year

Lean Thomas

CREDITS: Wikimedia CC BY-SA 3.0

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U.S. has a quarter fewer immigration judges than it did a year ago. Here's why

A Startling Reduction in Judicial Ranks (Image Credits: Unsplash)

The U.S. immigration court system entered 2026 with significantly fewer judges, exacerbating longstanding challenges in handling a massive caseload.

A Startling Reduction in Judicial Ranks

The nation counted 726 permanent immigration judges across 75 courts on February 4, 2025, including 683 line judges and 43 assistant chiefs.[1][2]

By early February 2026, that figure fell to 553, with 520 permanent judges and 33 assistant chiefs – a net decrease of about 25 percent despite some new hires.[1]

Exactly 202 judges from early 2025 no longer held positions, victims of firings, resignations, and retirements.[2]

This sharp decline struck hardest at certain locations. Twelve courts lost more than half their judges, while 14 now operate with two or fewer.[1]

Firings and Departures Drive the Exodus

The Trump administration dismissed nearly 100 judges in 2025 alone, often targeting those perceived as lenient during the prior administration.[3][1]

Dismissals came abruptly for some, including tenured judges escorted from benches mid-hearing. “Being walked off a bench like you’re a criminal is just very shocking,” said fired judge Tania Nemer.[1]

Others resigned or retired amid discomfort with policies pressuring quicker deportations and restricting judicial discretion. Amiena Khan, a fired assistant chief judge, called the terminations “chilling and disrespectful.”[2]

Support staff suffered too, with over 400 legal assistants, attorney advisers, and specialists departing – 75 percent of attorney advisers and 54 percent of court supervisors gone.[1]

  • San Francisco lost 16 judges, including 12 fired; its court closes soon, shifting 120,000 cases to overburdened Concord.[3]
  • Aurora, Colorado, and Oakdale, Louisiana, now have zero permanent judges.
  • Hartford, Connecticut, dropped to one judge handling over 40,000 cases.
  • Five courts operate with a single judge each.

Backlogs Mount as Operations Strain

The system grapples with nearly 4 million pending cases, and the judge shortage has intensified delays.[1]

Remaining judges shoulder overwhelming loads – some over 1,000 cases apiece – leading to postponed hearings stretching into 2029.[4]

Courts run on skeleton crews, with clerks managing multiple locations amid chaos from in-court arrests.[1]

Morale plummeted as staff witnessed emotional scenes but maintained neutrality. One clerk recalled hearing screams during detentions.[1]

Court Location Judges Early 2025 Judges Now
San Francisco, CA ~21 5
Hartford, CT 5 1
Aurora, CO 2 0

Due Process Under Pressure

Fewer judges erode fairness, as rushed dockets limit thorough reviews. Arwen Swink, a former judge, warned that firings signal judges to apply law as interpreted by leadership, not conscience.[1]

Ana Partida retired citing lost independence: “The stress of having no resources… is a tremendous weight.”[2]

The Justice Department defended changes, stating it restores integrity after Biden-era policies and hires top talent for efficiency.[1]

Hiring Push Meets Skepticism

The department recruited 17 new permanent judges, mostly from ICE and DHS, plus 52 temporary ones from military ranks.[1]

Ads seek “deportation judges” to deliver justice swiftly. Quarterly classes aim to rebuild, but critics doubt replacements match experience amid politicization.[3]

This personnel crisis underscores tensions between enforcement goals and judicial fairness. As backlogs persist, the system’s ability to deliver timely justice hangs in balance.

Key Takeaways

  • Judge count dropped 25% to 553, with 202 departures including nearly 100 firings.
  • 12 courts lost over half their judges; two have none.
  • Backlog nears 4 million cases, delaying hearings years.

What do you think about these changes to the immigration courts? Tell us in the comments.

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