San Francisco Chronicle

Revised travel ban with host of changes delayed

- By Matt Zapotosky and Abigail Hauslohner Matt Zapotosky and Abigail Hauslohner are Washington Post writers.

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s new executive order on immigratio­n will not include a blanket ban on citizens from Iraq, among a host of other revisions meant to allay legal and diplomatic concerns, people familiar with the matter said.

The White House late Tuesday scrapped plans for Trump to sign a revised travel ban Wednesday afternoon, a person familiar with the situation said. It was the third time the administra­tion has put it off since Trump said that dangerous people might enter the country without a prohibitio­n in place.

But when it is signed, people familiar with the matter said, the new order is expected to include a host of significan­t changes. The order will also exempt current visa holders and legal permanent residents, as well as not imposing a blanket ban on those from Iraq, where U.S. forces are working with the Iraqis to battle the Islamic State. It will not include an exception for religious minorities, which critics had pointed to as evidence it was meant to discrimina­te against Muslims. And it will not go into effect immediatel­y when it is signed.

The sources said the situation remains fluid, and changes remain possible.

The decision to delay signing the order came as people on Twitter and elsewhere heaped praise on Trump for his speech Tuesday night to a joint session of Congress. A CNN/ORC poll, for example, showed that 7 in 10 people who watched said the address made them feel more optimistic about the direction of the country, and about two-thirds said the president has the right priorities for the nation. The pool of those who watched the speech was about eight points more Republican than the total population.

It was not immediatel­y clear why the White House canceled plans to sign the new executive order, although CNN reported that a White House official did not deny that optics were part of the calculus. “We want the (executive order) to have its own ‘moment,’ ” an official told the network. A White House spokesman did not immediatel­y return messages seeking comment.

Trump’s original executive order, now frozen by the courts, had barred citizens of seven Muslimmajo­rity countries and all refugees from entering the United States. When it was implemente­d, the State Department provisiona­lly revoked tens of thousands of visas, and some people who were in transit when it took effect were detained or deported once they reached U.S. airports.

 ?? Tanya Moutzalias / Associated Press ?? Iraqi Suad Jazrawi, 77, is met by her nephew Wifer Halawi at Detroit Metropolit­an Airport last month after being delayed by the first travel ban.
Tanya Moutzalias / Associated Press Iraqi Suad Jazrawi, 77, is met by her nephew Wifer Halawi at Detroit Metropolit­an Airport last month after being delayed by the first travel ban.

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