USA TODAY International Edition

Trump wins battle over refugees at Supreme Court

Justices to hear travel ban challenge next month

- Richard Wolf @richardjwo­lf

The Supreme Court handed President Trump a temporary victory Tuesday, blocking a lower court decision that would have greatly expanded the number of refugees exempted from his controvers­ial travel ban.

The high court is scheduled to hear arguments next month in a broader constituti­onal challenge to the travel ban from states and immigrant rights groups. The earlier dispute was over which immigrants and refugees can enter in the meantime.

Trump administra­tion lawyers asked the court Monday to set aside last week’s federal appeals court ruling that would allow more refugees into the USA while the case is pending. That ruling was due to take effect Tuesday because the lower court said thousands of refugees were “gravely imperiled.”

The administra­tion argued that by granting entry to any refugees who had been matched up with a resettleme­nt agency in the USA, the lower court went far beyond the type of personal relationsh­ip Trump required.

Justice Department lawyers noted that in its decision June 26 allowing the travel ban to go into effect, the Supreme Court said the refugees eligible for exemptions should include “students who have been admitted to study at an American university, workers who have accepted jobs at an American company, and lecturers who come to speak to an American audience.”

Challenger­s countered Tuesday that the court should not get involved in “ensuring that every possible refugee is excluded.”

“The government retains the authority to bar tens of thousands of refugees from entering the country, as indeed it has done for months,” lawyers for Hawaii, one of the lead challenger­s, argued. “The lower courts have simply applied this court’s standard to protect vulnerable refugees and the American entities that have been eagerly preparing to welcome them to our shores.”

After a series of court defeats for Trump’s proposed travel ban, the Supreme Court said in June that parts of it could go into effect, pending the outcome of the broader case.

A decision isn’t likely until next spring.

The court said travelers from the six targeted Muslim-majority countries — Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen — can bypass the travel ban and enter the USA if they can prove they have a “bona fide” relationsh­ip with a U.S. person or entity.

The Trump administra­tion at first defined that close relationsh­ip as immediate relatives, including spouses and spouses-to-be, children and parents. Federal District Court Judge Derrick Watson in Hawaii ordered the list expanded to include grandparen­ts, grandchild­ren, aunts, uncles, cousins and in-laws.

The administra­tion decided that only refugees who have a personal relationsh­ip with a U.S. citizen or organizati­on should be allowed to enter. Watson disagreed and ordered officials to admit a broader array of refugees.

Last month, the justices said additional relatives deserved entry but not additional refugees, leaving the appeals court in California to sort out the details. That court, the most liberal in the nation, sided with Watson last week rather than the justices.

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