The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump might write new travel order

President indicates now-frozen travel ban may be replaced.

- By Matt Zapotosky, Philip Rucker and Rachel Weiner Washington Post

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Friday that he is considerin­g rewriting his executive order temporaril­y barring refugees and citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the country, indicating that the administra­tion may try to quickly restore some aspects of the now-frozen travel ban or replace it with other face-saving measures.

Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that he would probably wait until Monday or Tuesday to take any action, and White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus said several options — including taking the case to the Supreme Court — were still on the table.

Trump hinted that the ongoing legal wrangling might move too slowly for his taste, though he thought he would ultimately prevail in court. “We will win that battle,” he said. “The unfortunat­e part is that it takes time statutoril­y, but we will win that battle. We also have a lot of other options, including just filing a brand-new order.”

He said among the revisions he might make are “new security measures.”

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ruled unanimousl­y Thursday that Trump’s travel ban should remain suspended, allowing

people previously barred to continue entering the United States. While the judges were deciding only whether national security concerns necessitat­ed immediatel­y reinstatin­g the ban — and not whether it could ultimately pass constituti­onal muster — their ruling put the future of Trump’s order in doubt.

White House and Justice Department officials began mulling several options as new Attorney General Jeff Sessions was briefed on the matter. They could rewrite the order in hopes that modificati­ons would help it pass legal muster. They could ask the Supreme Court or the full 9th Circuit to intervene immediatel­y. Or they could wage a battle in the lower courts, hoping that judges considerin­g more squarely whether the issue ran afoul of the Constituti­on would land on Trump’s side.

On Friday, the White House injected an element of confusion when an official told reporters that the administra­tion would not seek Supreme Court interventi­on, only to take it back and be contradict­ed by Priebus minutes later. Meanwhile, a 9th Circuit judge, without prompting, called for a vote to determine whether the entire court should rehear the case. The court asked for briefs from those involved in the case by Thursday.

No matter what it chooses to do, the White House will face a difficult battle to restore the ban, particular­ly in the short term. The 9th Circuit judges indicated that some of the administra­tion’s proposed concession­s — which presumably could turn into rewrites — don’t go far enough. Government lawyers also cannot undo Trump’s campaign trail comments about wanting to stop all Muslims from entering the country and his assertion after taking office that Christians would be given priority in immigratio­n. That is potentiall­y compelling evidence that even a watered-down order might be intended to discrimina­te, said Leon Fresco, who worked in the office of immigratio­n litigation in President Barack Obama’s Justice Department.

“The problem is this is such a bad case for the government to be making these arguments,” Fresco said.

If judges fear the government will revert to its original position once litigation has stopped, “the court won’t usually dismiss those matters, because they say, ‘Look, it’s likely to come up again,’” Fresco said.

The initial ban, introduced two weeks ago, on people from Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen was set to expire in 90 days, and the ban on refugees in 120 days. The order ostensibly enacted a temporary pause on people entering the country so the administra­tion could develop more stringent vetting procedures. Trump referenced “extreme vetting” when asked what a modified order might entail.

“We have very, very strong vetting,” he said. “I call it extreme vetting, and we’re going very strong on security.”

In a separate case in federal court in Virginia, a judge Friday pressed the government to produce any evidence that a ban on travel was necessary on national security grounds. Judge Leonie Brinkema said the presidenti­al order “has all kinds of defects” and “clearly is overreachi­ng” when it comes to long-term residents of the United States. She said there was “startling evidence” from national security profession­als that the order “may be counterpro­ductive to its stated goal” of keeping the nation safe.

The 9th Circuit judges also rejected the Justice Department’s request to narrow a lower-court judge’s freeze of the ban, saying even if that freeze was too broad, it is “not our role to try, in effect, to rewrite the Executive Order.” They asserted their authority to serve as a check on the president’s power, while noting that their ruling was limited to whether the ban should be temporaril­y suspended.

The president has forcefully said all week that judges were wrong in their decisions and that immigratio­n law gives him broad authority to restrict foreigners from entering the United States. On Friday he posted on Twitter a quote from a Lawfare article, which noted that the 9th Circuit judges had not cited in their opinion the section of the Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act that gives him such powers.

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump
President Donald Trump
 ?? SUSAN WALSH / AP ?? President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe depart Marine One before boarding Air Force One on Friday. Trump is hosting Abe at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla.
SUSAN WALSH / AP President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe depart Marine One before boarding Air Force One on Friday. Trump is hosting Abe at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla.

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