USA TODAY International Edition

Court fights likely to ratchet up for Trump

As foes challenge policies, Justice Dept. prepares to defend orders, stops enforcing Obamaera rules

- Richard Wolf @ richardjwo­lf USA TODAY

WASHINGTON When President Trump angrily tweeted “SEE YOU IN COURT” after an appellate panel’s ruling in February against his ban on immigrants from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries, he probably didn’t mean so many courts so soon.

Now, as his Justice Department prepares to defend a watered- down travel ban from coast to coast over the next 11 days, the administra­tion also faces real and threatened court challenges to a range of policies, from rollbacks of clean air and water regulation­s to religious liberty protection­s and funding cuts for sanctuary cities.

Thus it was that advocates for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r community last week blasted out their intention to file a lawsuit against Trump’s executive order protecting religious believers — before the details were announced. The ACLU also initially threatened court action.

For an executive branch that has yet to fill most of its top jobs or get any major legislatio­n through Congress, the Trump administra­tion is already dealing with an array of court battles — many of its own making — that could stretch through the next four years.

“What Trump has been do-

“The left’s only hope of winning at this point is in the courts.” Adam Winkler, a constituti­onal law professor at UCLA School of Law

ing is giving his opponents really strong legal claims,” said Adam Winkler, a constituti­onal law professor at UCLA School of Law. “The left’s only hope of winning at this point is in the courts.”

To date, those courts have acted as a check against Trump’s assertion of broad executive powers, much as they did against President Obama. Federal judges from Maryland to Hawaii struck down key parts of the travel ban, prompting the administra­tion to issue a less- restrictiv­e version affecting only six countries and exempting thousands of people with visas and green cards.

That version will come before the full U. S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit in Richmond on Monday, as well as a panel of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in Seattle a week later. It could reach the Supreme Court early next year.

Trump’s pledge during last year’s presidenti­al campaign to reverse the flow of illegal immigrants led to his executive order against funding for so- called sanctuary cities that harbor people the administra­tion seeks to deport. A federal district court judge in San Francisco ruled last month that the president exceeded his authority, prompting an- other White House vow to appeal.

“This is the Trump era,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said. “This will be the administra­tion that fully enforces our nation’s immigratio­n laws.”

Targeting immigrants was something President George W. Bush did after the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001 — and the court battles that resulted are still raging. The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in January in a case brought by undocument­ed Muslim immigrants detained for months as suspected terrorists. The case is so old that Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan recused themselves because of past involvemen­t before they came to the high court.

Other policies already being challenged in court by environmen­tal and consumer groups include Trump’s executive order requiring that for every new regulation issued, two others must be repealed, as well as a decision by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to keep a controvers­ial pesticide on the market despite risks to consumers.

Another category of potential legal challenges includes several court fights dating back to the Obama administra­tion in which Trump’s team has changed sides. It dropped objections to Texas’ restrictio­ns on voting rights and a Virginia school district’s restrictio­ns on which bathrooms transgende­r students can use — both cases that could reach the Supreme Court as early as next year.

The Trump administra­tion also tried without success to block a consent decree to reform Baltimore’s police department, which Obama’s Justice Department accused of racial bias. And it has inserted itself into a court battle aimed at reducing the power of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and removing its director, Richard Cordray.

“The courts are standing strong so far,” said Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund. “This administra­tion has not been able to fulfill many of the efforts that it has launched in the last three months.”

Looming in the future is a showdown over Obama’s environmen­tal legacy. Last month the Trump administra­tion won a 60day delay in a case brought by coal- producing states and industries against tougher emissions limits for new and existing power plants, lest a federal appeals court rule in favor of rules no longer supported by the White House.

Trump also has signed an executive order directing the EPA to revise an Obama policy expanding federal power to protect waterways, such as wetlands and floodplain­s. Conservati­ves complain that the rules threaten private property rights.

“My guess is that the bulk of the litigation is ahead of us,” said Richard Revesz, an environmen­tal and regulatory law expert at New York University School of Law. “All this litigation is going to consume the full four years.”

Other administra­tion policies that have not been fleshed out provide fodder for future lawsuits. They could include efforts to spend federal funds on private school vouchers, reverse parts of the Affordable Care Act through executive actions, and target voter fraud. Trump has claimed without evidence that millions of people vote illegally.

“That’s the kind of language that often leads to voter suppressio­n efforts,” said David Cole, national legal director at the American Civil Liberties Union. “Those will certainly be challenged in the courts.”

 ?? BRUCE OMORI, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ?? Hawaii Attorney General Douglas Chin, left, arrives to challenge President Trump’s travel ban in a district court.
BRUCE OMORI, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY Hawaii Attorney General Douglas Chin, left, arrives to challenge President Trump’s travel ban in a district court.
 ?? JASON REDMOND, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson talks about the controvers­ial travel order March 15 in Seattle.
JASON REDMOND, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson talks about the controvers­ial travel order March 15 in Seattle.

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