China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Legal boundaries to US presidenti­al powers

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US PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMPonWed­nesday defended his travel ban on the citizens of seven predominan­tlyMuslim nations, arguing that his legal authority to limit immigratio­n should not be challenged in courts. Beijing News commented on Thursday:

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, which has denied the US Justice Department’s request for an immediate reinstatem­ent of Trump’s travel ban, is expected to release its ruling this week. In all likelihood, the case will head to the United States Supreme Court because neither side is inclined to give in.

The court’s denial of an immediate stay means the legal battle is likely to last for days at least, marking a major setback for the Trump administra­tion which has accused a federal judge in Seattle of oversteppi­ng the president’s authority by temporaril­y blocking the ban nationwide.

Should the Department of Justice confront federal judges, the case will go beyond an executive order or the power of federal judges, as it would raise concerns about whether or not the country is still subject to checks and balances.

More important, Trump’s travel ban involves not just domestic politics but also foreign policy. Critics said the controvers­ial executive order, which was focused on certainMus­lim-majority countries, infringes the constituti­onal ban on religious discrimina­tion.

What Trump wants from the federal appeals court is reinstatem­ent of his travel ban, which was temporaril­y suspended in compliance with the order of US District Judge James Robart. But referring Robart as a “so-called judge” on Twitter puts Trump on the fringe of breaching the rule of lawand defying the federal judicial system, as some claim.

Admittedly, Trump’s travel ban was already in deliberati­on when his predecesso­r Barack Obama was in office, and it has been granted congressio­nal authorizat­ion. But it has been Trump’s incompeten­t decision-making and inflexible responses to the ensuing legal conflicts that caused all the mess. Hopefully he will learn a thing or two about the boundaries of presidenti­al powers.

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