USA TODAY US Edition

High court: Travel ban can proceed in full for now

- Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court ruled Monday that President Trump’s immigratio­n travel ban against six majority-Muslim countries can take full effect while legal challenges against the latest version are still tied up in courts.

The court’s identical orders in two challenges to the ban mean that most travelers from Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia and Chad cannot enter the USA while the cases proceed.

Lower courts had exempted travelers with “bona fide” connection­s to the United States, such as the grandparen­ts and in-laws of citizens. Those exemptions mirrored ones designed by the Supreme Court in June, when the justices allowed only part of an earlier, temporary travel ban to be implemente­d. The new ban, issued in September, is of indefinite length.

The orders are a victory for a White House in need of a win days after Trump’s first national security adviser,

Michael Flynn, pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI and agreed to cooperate with special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

By allowing the full travel ban to take effect for now, the justices may be signaling that they are likely to uphold it on the merits later.

The unsigned orders issued Monday urge two federal appeals courts with oral arguments scheduled this week to render decisions “with appropriat­e dispatch.” Two justices — Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor — would have denied the administra­tion’s request.

The battle over the travel ban dates to the first week of the Trump administra­tion and has involved different countries, restrictio­ns and exemptions.

After losing in nearly all federal district and appeals courts through the winter and spring, the administra­tion won the high court’s partial support in June. The justices said travelers from six predominan­tly Muslim nations — a group that included Sudan but not Chad at the time — could be banned if they lacked a direct connection to people or institutio­ns in the U.S.

But that ban expired in September when the administra­tion completed its worldwide review of screening procedures used by foreign government­s and announced its new, more permanent policy by proclamati­on. The Supreme Court dismissed the pending challenge to the earlier ban.

Before the third one could take effect, however, it was blocked by the same district court judges in Hawaii and Maryland who struck down the prior version. Those judges cited different reasons for their decisions. In Hawaii, Judge Derrick Watson said the latest ban illegally targeted people based on nationalit­y. In Maryland, Judge Theodore Chuang said it unconstitu­tionally singled out people based on their religion.

The administra­tion says in its latest Supreme Court filings that the new travel ban is the result of its “comprehen- sive” global review and should therefore withstand challenges the earlier versions did not.

“The proclamati­on amply justifies the president’s finding that the national interest warrants the exclusion of certain foreign nationals,” the Justice Department said.

Opponents — the state of Hawaii and the Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project — say the government’s motives remain the same, citing Trump’s statements during the presidenti­al campaign and his tweets and comments this year.

Regardless of the Supreme Court’s ruling, both cases are headed for oral arguments this week before a threejudge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in Seattle and the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit in Richmond.

When those courts issue their verdicts — most likely before the end of the month — the losing sides are likely to seek a final verdict from the Supreme Court. Those cases could be heard and decided before the end of the court’s term in June.

 ??  ?? Muslim protesters in Washington, D.C., rally against President Trump’s travel ban in October. JIM WATSON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Muslim protesters in Washington, D.C., rally against President Trump’s travel ban in October. JIM WATSON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

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