Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump’s travel ban suffers blow from another court

- By Adam Liptak

WASHINGTON — A second federal appeals court ruled Thursday against President Donald Trump’s latest effort to limit travel from countries said to pose a threat to the nation’s security.

The decision, from the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in Richmond, Va., will have no immediate practical impact. The Supreme Court agreed last month to hear an appeal from a broadly similar decision from the 9th Circuit, in San Francisco.

In December, in a sign that the Supreme Court may be receptive to upholding Trump’s latest order, the court allowed it to go into effect as the two cases moved forward.

The cases concern Trump’s third and most considered effort to make good on a campaign promise to secure the nation’s borders. But challenger­s to the latest ban, issued as a presidenti­al proclamati­on in September, said it was tainted by religious animus and not adequately justified by national security concerns.

The ban restricts travel from eight nations, six of them predominan­tly Muslim: Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Chad, North Korea and Venezuela. The restrictio­ns vary in their details but, for the most part, citizens of the countries are forbidden from emigrating to the United States and many of them are barred from working, studying or vacationin­g here.

The 4th Circuit, by a 9-4 vote, ruled that the latest ban, like an earlier one, most likely violated the Constituti­on’s Establishm­ent Clause, which forbids religious discrimina­tion by the government.

The majority based its conclusion in large measure on statements Trump has made as a candidate and while in office.

The 9th Circuit, by contrast, ruled on statutory grounds, saying Trump had exceeded the authority Congress had given him over immigratio­n and had violated a part of the immigratio­n laws barring discrimina­tion in the issuance of visas.

The Supreme Court will consider both the constituti­onal and statutory arguments in the appeal from the 9th Circuit’s decision, which is likely to be heard in April.

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