The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Supreme Court just validated religious discrimina­tion

- Dana Milbank Columnist

On the penultimat­e page of their 39-page majority ruling in the Trump travel-ban case Tuesday, the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve justices overturned a 74-yearold decision they weren’t asked to consider.

Renouncing the 1944 Korematsu v. United States decision, which upheld internment camps for U.S. citizens and noncitizen­s of Japanese descent during World War II, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote: “Korematsu was gravely wrong the day it was decided, has been overruled in the court of history, and — to be clear — ‘has no place in law under the Constituti­on.’”

It should take the court of history much less time to conclude that the Roberts Court was likewise wrong in deciding to uphold President Trump’s travel ban. With the frequency of Trump’s broadsides against the justice system and the rule of law, it shouldn’t be long at all.

The president, who had publicly attacked the courts and “socalled judges” while the case was going through the judicial system, and scolded his own lawyers for making the changes that allowed the ban to pass constituti­onal muster, wasted no time after the ruling to expand on his wish to end due process along the border.

“Somebody touches our land, we now take them to a court, to a judge,” he complained Tuesday, a moment after hailing his Supreme Court win. “Other countries, it’s called ‘I’m sorry, you can’t come in, you have to leave.’ This one, we have judges. If they step on our land, we have judges, it’s insane. So we’re going to have to change our whole immigratio­n policy.”

Asked specifical­ly whether the Supreme Court ruling emboldened him to deport people without due process, Trump replied: “We have to find a system where you don’t need thousands of judges sitting at a border. Other countries look at us and they think we’re crazy.”

Yes, autocratic countries do tend to think due process is crazy.

The justices, scoring points as if in a debating competitio­n, missed the big-picture impact their decision would have on discrimina­tion generally and on the president’s shaky regard for the rule of law.

The legal test was whether a “reasonable observer” would think the travel ban reflected religious bias. Roberts believed not, because “the text says nothing about religion” and Trump’s order “is facially neutral toward religion.” He dismissed the many anti-Muslim statements Trump has made as “extrinsic statements.” Extrinsic? “Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country’s representa­tives can figure out what the hell is going on,” the Trump campaign proclaimed.

Trump lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani said his client had used the phrase “Muslim ban” and had directed Giuliani to “show me the right way to do it legally.”

But that’s not the view of the Roberts Court. This 5-to-4 conservati­ve majority says the travel ban isn’t discrimina­tory because it doesn’t use the word “Muslim.”

If the court applied the same “facially neutral” standard to segregatio­n-era laws (rather than intent and impact), cities could ban people in black-majority neighborho­ods from riding the bus, if the statute didn’t mention race.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, in her dissent, found “stark parallels between the reasoning of this case and that of Korematsu”; in both cases, “the Government invoked an ill-defined national-security threat to justify an exclusiona­ry policy of sweeping proportion.”

She cited Justice Robert Jackson’s dissent in Korematsu, in which he argued that, while the internment order itself was temporary, “once a judicial opinion rationaliz­es such an order … the Court for all time has validated the principle of racial discrimina­tion.”

Now Roberts has validated religious discrimina­tion. And his fig leaf of facial neutrality won’t stand up in the court of history.

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