USA TODAY US Edition

Trump prepares new travel ban

Revised order would allow entry to those with visas, green cards

- Alan Gomez @alangomez USA TODAY

President Trump plans to issue a revised version of his temporary travel ban targeting majorityMu­slim countries as early as Tuesday, probably focusing on fewer people so it will survive legal challenges.

The new order, according to a draft obtained by the Associated Press, would focus on the same seven countries — Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen — but would bar entry only to those without a visa and who have never entered the USA. Unlike the original order, people from those countries who have permanent U.S. residency (green cards) or visas would not face any restrictio­ns.

Trump’s first attempt to institute the ban last month led to widespread chaos around the world as foreigners with green cards and visas were detained at U.S. airports and barred from boarding U.S. flights. That executive order was blocked by federal judges, who ruled it may have violated constituti­onal protection­s for documented immigrants.

Trump said last week that although he disagreed with the rulings from a judge in Seattle and the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, his revised order would be “very much tailored” to those rulings.

The Jan. 27 order barred citizens of Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen for 90 days, all refugees for 120 days and Syrian citizens indefinite­ly. The revised order would not impose an indefinite ban on Syrians, according to the AP.

Trump said a temporary ban is necessary to give his agencies time to develop “extreme vetting ” procedures for those terrorpron­e countries to ensure that terrorists don’t enter the USA.

Legal experts said Trump’s new approach will be more difficult to beat in court. “It definitely seems like he’d be on much stronger ground,” said Andrew Hessick, a professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law who co-signed a federal court brief arguing against Trump’s executive order. “It’s very hard to say there’s a due process claim for people who are outside the country.”

Attorneys who led the charge against Trump’s first executive order remain confident they’ll prevail in court again because the second version has the same “core problem.”

“We do not think that religious discrimina­tion will automatica­lly be removed simply by tweaking the wording of the executive order,” said Lee Gelernt, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney who won a stay of the order in New York. “We’re certainly pleased if certain groups are exempted, like legal permanent residents and existing visa holders. But that will not cure all the legal defects.”

By focusing a new executive order on foreigners who have never been in the USA, the Trump administra­tion makes it difficult for anyone to even initiate a lawsuit.

Washington state and Minnesota won suits against the order because it limited the rights of foreign-born, documented residents living in those states and hurt state universiti­es that have foreigners from those countries working as employees and paying tuition as students. If those people are allowed to travel freely under the new ban, Washington and Minnesota would have to find a new approach.

Even under the revised order, some legal experts said, states could argue that their residents and universiti­es would be illegally hurt. For example, a state university could say it couldn’t recruit students or faculty from Somalia. Or permanent residents from Yemen could say their rights to sponsor relatives living back home for a visa were taken away without due process.

“With the right plaintiffs, there remains the possibilit­y that the constituti­onal claim could be brought,” said Robert Chang, a professor at the Seattle University School of Law.

 ?? POOL PHOTO BY OLIVIER DOULIERY ?? President Trump signs executive orders, including a temporary travel ban against people from seven majority-Muslim countries, at the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., on Jan. 27.
POOL PHOTO BY OLIVIER DOULIERY President Trump signs executive orders, including a temporary travel ban against people from seven majority-Muslim countries, at the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., on Jan. 27.

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