Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

High court allows for broad enforcemen­t of travel ban

- By Matt Zapotosky

WASHINGTON — U.S. officials can at least temporaril­y continue to block entrance into the U.S. for those refugees who have formal assurances from resettleme­nt agencies after the Supreme Court intervened again Monday to save a piece of President Donald Trump’s travel ban.

Responding to an emergency request from the Justice Department, Justice Anthony Kennedy stopped an earlier federal appeals court ruling that had allowed refugees with a formal assurance to enter the country.

Justice Kennedy, who handles cases on an emergency basis from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, ordered those suing over the ban to respond by noon Tuesday, and he indicated that the appeals court ruling in their favor would be stayed “pending receipt” of their response.

The Supreme Court’s decision came not long after the Justice Department asked the justices to act. That filing, by Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall, demonstrat­ed the lengths to which the government is willing to go to impose its desired version of the ban, even before the high court takes up in earnest next month whether the measure is lawful at its core.

At issue is whether the president can block a group of about 24,000 refugees with assurances from entering the United States after the Supreme Court decided in June to permit a limited version of his travel ban to take effect.

Since Mr. Trump signed his first travel ban shortly after taking office, the directive has been mired in a complicate­d legal battle.

The president ultimately revoked the first ban — which blocked refugees and citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States — and replaced it with a less onerous version that blockedref­ugees and citizens of six of the initial seven countries.

The Supreme Court ultimately decided Mr. Trump could impose that measure, butnot on those with a “bona fide” connection to the UnitedStat­es, such as having family members here, a job or a place in a U.S. university.

It is the interpreta­tion of a “bona fide” connection to the United States that is being debated. The government initially sought to block grandparen­ts and other extended family members of people in the United States from entering — as well as refugees with formal assurances — though a federal district judge stopped from doing so. The Supreme Court in July largely upheld that ruling, though it put on hold the portion dealing with refugees.

Last week, a federal appeals court panel weighed in, deciding that the administra­tion could block neither grandparen­ts nor refugees with assurances.

The Justice Department asked the Supreme Court to step in again — though only to block refugees, not grandparen­ts and other extended family members. Even those refugees with formal assurances from a resettleme­nt agency lack the sort of connection that should exempt them from the ban, the Justice Department argued in its filing to the Supreme Court.

“The absence of a formal connection between a resettleme­nt agency and a refugee subject to an assurance stands in stark contrast to the sort of relationsh­ips this Court identified as sufficient in its June 26 stay ruling,” Mr. Wall wrote in his filing. “Unlike students who have been admitted to study at an American university, workers who have accepted jobs at an American company, and lecturers who come to speak to an American audience, refugees do not have any freestandi­ng connection to resettleme­nt agencies, separate and apart from the refugee-admissions process itself, by virtue of the agencies’ assurance agreement with the government.”

Neal Katyal, a lawyer representi­ng the state of Hawaii, which is challengin­g the travel ban, wrote on Twitter that he would “fight” the government’s latest request.

The government said the battle is urgent. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit had said its ruling allowing refugees with resettleme­nt agreements would take effect Tuesday, which Mr. Wall asserted could be disruptive.

“The government began implementi­ng the Order subject to the limitation­s articulate­d by this Court more than two months ago, on June 29, which entailed extensive, worldwide coordinati­on among multiple agencies and the issuance of guidance to provide clarity and minimize confusion,” Mr. Wall wrote.

Time is beginning to become a factor in the broader fight over Mr. Trump’s travel ban, with the Supreme Court scheduled to hear arguments Oct. 10.

The measure was supposed to have been temporary — lasting 90 days for citizens of the six affected countries, and 120 days for refugees.

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