Chicago Sun-Times

Trump’s new travel ban in effect Thursday — unless blocked again

- Alan Gomez @ alangomez

President Trump’s second attempt at a temporary travel ban, which targets six majority- Muslim countries, goes into effect Thursday — and faces a second round of legal attempts to thwart it.

States from Hawaii to Washington, immigratio­n advocacy groups and private residents have filed lawsuits to block the ban from going into effect, as happened when Trump issued his first travel ban in late January.

Federal judges will weigh the president’s powers to secure the nation from terrorists against the constituti­onal rights of foreigners in the United States.

Trump’s first ban barred citizens of Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen for 90 days, all refugees for 120 days and Syrian citizens indefinite­ly.

Trump’s second ban, signed March 6, temporaril­y bars citizens of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen and Syria for 90 days and all refugees for 120 days. Iraq was removed from the list after its government agreed to enhanced screening of its citizens, and the indefinite ban on Syrians was dropped.

The White House says the ban has been tailored to survive legal scrutiny.

Critics say the ban repeats illegal moves from the first order. Lee Gelernt, an ACLU attorney, said the latest order “discrimina­tes on the basis of religion” and “will bring significan­t hardship to many people inside and outside the country.”

The largest legal assault is a lawsuit filed by Washington state and joined by California, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New York and Oregon. They argue that the ban will hurt their economies by limiting students and professors who can work and study at state universiti­es, reducing tourism from the Middle East and curbing employment from those countries.

U. S. District Judge James Robart in Seattle, who halted Trump’s first ban, is hearing this lawsuit, too. He gave government lawyers until Tuesday night to file a response. Robart could issue an order immediatel­y after that or schedule a hearing later this week.

Hawaii has filed its own lawsuit with similar claims that the ban will hurt tourism and residents who have relatives living in the targeted countries. Hawaii is joined by a Muslim imam who claims his family and members of his mosque will be hurt by the ban. U. S. District Judge Derrick Watson has scheduled a hearing for Wednesday.

Refugee assistance and civil rights groups are challengin­g the ban in a federal court in Maryland. They are asking a judge to halt the order along with Trump’s move to lower the total number of refugees accepted by the U. S. this year from 110,000 to 50,000. Several Maryland residents with families in the targeted countries are part of that lawsuit. U. S. District Judge Theodore Chuang has scheduled a Wednesday hearing.

Federal judges struck down the first order mainly because it banned foreigners who already had legal permanent residence or valid visas to enter the country.

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