The Columbus Dispatch

Trump’s Muslim ban is bad policy

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It’s not looking terribly likely that the U.S. Supreme Court will strike down President Trump’s controvers­ial travel ban. At Wednesday’s oral argument, members of the court’s conservati­ve majority seemed skeptical about the assertion that the president doesn’t have the legal authority to bar travel to the U.S. from several Muslimmajo­rity countries, or that the restrictio­n amounted to an illegal “Muslim ban.”

But even if the court agrees — wrongly, in our view — that the ban can go forward legally, the fact remains that imposing such a broad exclusion based on discrimina­tory misconcept­ions is foolish and counterpro­ductive policy.

From the early days of his candidacy, Donald Trump exhibited clear animus toward immigrants — particular­ly those from Mexico — and toward Muslims. After the December 2015 massacre in San Bernardino, in which a U.S.-born Muslim man and his Pakistani wife killed 14 people and wounded 22 others at an office holiday party before being killed themselves in a shootout with police, candidate Trump said he wanted “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country’s representa­tives can figure out what is going on.” He also called for a database of Muslims (before abandoning the idea later) and contemplat­ed closing mosques, among other ideas repugnant to a free society. Whether Trump’s statements on the campaign trail can be used to challenge a policy he advanced after he was elected is a sticky issue for the court to grapple with, but Trump has made it abundantly clear that he has had trouble separating violent extremism from a mainstream religion.

Wednesday’s hearing focused on Trump’s third iteration of the ban. It bars people from seven countries from entering the U.S. without special clearance. Five of those countries — Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen and Somalia — are Muslim majority. Trump extended the ban to North Korea and, to a more limited degree, Venezuela, two non-Muslim countries at diplomatic odds with the U.S.

The ban is bizarrely misfocused. Not a single person from any of the countries on the list has committed a fatal act of terrorism in the U.S. The administra­tion has yet to spell out how and why it believes there is insufficie­nt vetting of visa-holders from the now-banned countries.

The effect of the clampdown has been a further deteriorat­ion in relations between the U.S. and the Muslim world, an undercutti­ng of the principles of openness upon which American society is founded and an embrace of rank unfairness in barring a large group of people based on the feared acts of the few. A similar construct would be for the European Union to ban American visitors because of our high levels of gun violence.

Consistent with the administra­tion’s broad efforts to reduce immigratio­n, Trump’s ban serves one overarchin­g purpose: It plays to the xenophobes among his political base. Yet most of the fatal terrorist attacks that have occurred in the U.S. were committed by U.S. citizens or longtime lawful permanent residents who were radicalize­d well after they arrived in the U.S. The president focuses on perceived enemies from without, not the danger from within. And that is a political failure of the first magnitude.

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