Imperial Valley Press

US government says new travel ban ‘substantia­lly different’

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SEATTLE (AP) — President Donald Trump’s revised travel ban is “substantia­lly different” from the original and a judge shouldn’t apply a previous restrainin­g order to the new version, federal lawyers said Tuesday in a court filing. Justice Department lawyers filed the documents in U.S. District Court in Seattle, two days before the executive order is set to go into effect.

Washington and several other states are trying to block the revised ban that affects six mostly Muslim nations, saying it’s unconstitu­tional.

Government lawyers say the new version removed provisions that “purportedl­y drew religious distinctio­ns — erasing any doubt that national security, not religion, is the focus.”

They made their filings with Judge James Robart, who blocked the original ban last month. Washington state wants him to apply that decision to the new order.

Trump’s revised ban applies to Somalia, Iran, Syria, Sudan, Libya and Yemen and temporaril­y shuts down the U.S. refugee program.

Unlike the original order, it says people with visas won’t be affected and removes language that would have given priority to religious minorities for entry to the U.S.

Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson, joined in his lawsuit by heavily Democratic California, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New York and Oregon, said the revised ban is still flawed and harms residents, universiti­es and businesses, especially tech companies such as Washington statebased Microsoft and Amazon that rely on foreign workers.

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