Mass EOIR Shakeup: Immigration Judges Face Firings Amid Policy Shifts and Backlog Crisis

May 22, 2026
Mass EOIR Shakeup: Immigration Judges Face Firings Amid Policy Shifts and Backlog Crisis
  • The EOIR and its critics are at loggerheads over a sweeping shift in immigration policy, with former judges and policy analysts describing directives that push decisions to align with administration goals, undermining due process and the integrity of proceedings.

  • The mass firings and staff reshaping have coincided with a broader shift in how courts operate, potentially accelerating backlogs and restructuring caseload management.

  • Prominent voices from the Chelmsford and Boston Immigrant Court sectors, including Nina Fróes and Sarah Cade, argue about accountability, backlog causes, and the impact of policy-driven denials on judicial independence.

  • Starting in early 2025, a wave of terminations hit the EOIR, including hundreds of immigration judges, signaling a dramatic reworking of how asylum and removal cases are handled.

  • Judges and staff report a toxic work environment and directives that pressure alignment with administration goals, with some cases terminated or closed despite performance on the bench.

  • Policy memoranda—52 issued in about 15 months—have shaped how cases are decided, seemingly steering asylum denial rates and other relief pathways.

  • Backlogs in removal proceedings have surged, with the Chelmsford backlog alone around 60,000 cases, while other courts face closures and nationwide removal caseloads remaining historically high.

  • Fewer judges handling rising caseloads, combined with court closures, have intensified pressure on the system and raised questions about capacity to deliver fair hearings.

  • Litigation over terminations continues, with concerns about BIA precedents and the toll on judges, attorneys, and staff, including potential unemployment benefits and relocation.

  • Observers frame this as part of a long-term transformation of U.S. immigration courts under successive administrations, with lasting implications for due process, backlog management, and credibility.

  • Morale among judges, including fears of further terminations and court closures, underscores concerns about the independence and credibility of immigration courts going forward.

  • The Board of Immigration Appeals has issued numerous precedent-setting decisions that critics say micromanage judges and tighten relief avenues, affecting bond hearings and other relief like asylum and juvenile provisions.

Summary based on 4 sources


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