Daily Times (Primos, PA)

New travel ban eases some legal questions but not all

- By Gene Johnson and Sadie Gurman

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump’s revised travel ban eases some of the legal questions surroundin­g the previous order, but critics said it does not answer all of them, including accusation­s that the measure is a thinly veiled attempt to discrimina­te against Muslims.

Opponents promised to challenge the president again in court.

The new, narrower ban announced Monday temporaril­y bars new visas for citizens of six predominan­tly Muslim countries — one fewer than the original ban, with Iraq removed from the list. It also suspends the entire U.S. refugee program.

The measure applies only to refugees who are not already on their way to the United States and people seeking new visas. It removes language that gave priority to religious minorities. Critics said the language was designed to help Christians get into the U.S. and to exclude Muslims.

The changes will make the new executive order tougher to fight in court, but they “will not quell litigation or concerns,” Stephen Yale-Loehr, an immigratio­n law professor at Cornell University Law School, said in a written statement.

“U.S. relatives will still sue over the inability of their loved ones to join them in the United States,” he said. “U.S. companies may sue because they cannot hire needed workers from the six countries. And U.S. universiti­es will worry about the impact of the order on internatio­nal students’ willingnes­s to attend college in the United States.”

The American Civil Liberties Union promised “to move very quickly” to try to stop the order.

New York immigratio­n attorney Ted Ruthizer said this ban will be “much, much tougher” for a federal judge to block.

Courts could find it compelling that the order does not cover all Muslims from all countries, he said. And judges have a history of upholding portions of immigratio­n law that discrimina­te on the basis of race and nationalit­y when national security is an issue.

“There’s still the argument that, when you take down all the window dressing, it’s still a religion ban, but these are the kinds of nuances that the courts will look at,” Ruthizer said.

Top Republican­s welcomed Trump’s changes. Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah said the revised order makes significan­t progress toward what Hatch called for after the first version: to avoid hindering innocent travels and refugees fleeing violence and persecutio­n.

He urged Trump “to continue the difficult work of crafting policies that keep us safe while living up to our best values.”

House Speaker Paul Ryan said the order “advances our shared goal of protecting the homeland.”

States that challenged the original travel ban claimed victory to an extent, saying the changes amounted to an “incredible concession” that the original order was flawed, as Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring, a Democrat, put it.

Herring and Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson, who successful­ly sued to stop implementa­tion of the original order after it created chaos at airports around the country, said they were reviewing the new order to determine what legal steps to take next.

“Although the new order appears to be significan­tly scaled back, it still sends a horrible message to the world, to Muslim-Americans, and to minority communitie­s across the country, without any demonstrab­le benefit to national security,” Herring said.

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 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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