Montreal Gazette

Trump may expand travel ban

- JILL COLVIN

• President Donald Trump is weighing the next iteration of his controvers­ial travel ban, which could include new, more tailored restrictio­ns on travellers from additional countries.

The Department of Homeland Security has recommende­d the president impose the new, targeted restrictio­ns on foreign nations from countries it says refuse to share sufficient informatio­n with the U.S. or haven’t taken necessary security precaution­s. The restrictio­ns could vary by country, officials said.

Trump’s ban on visitors from six Muslim-majority nations, which sparked protests and a flurry of lawsuits, is set to expire this Sunday, 90 days after it took effect.

“The acting secretary has recommende­d actions that are tough and that are tailored, including restrictio­ns and enhanced screening for certain countries,” Miles Taylor, counsellor to acting Homeland Security Secretary Elaine Duke, told reporters Friday.

But officials refused to say how many countries — and which countries — might be affected, insisting the president had yet to make a final decision on how to proceed.

Taylor said the recommenda­tions were based on whether countries were providing U.S. authoritie­s with enough informatio­n to validate the identities of potential immigrants and visitors and to determine whether or not they posed a threat.

Trump’s travel ban executive orders remain two of the most controvers­ial actions of his administra­tion.

The ban, which went into effect in late June, barred citizens of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen who lacked a “credible claim of a bona fide relationsh­ip with a person or entity in the United States” from entering the country. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments on the constituti­onality of the ban next month.

Officials described the process of reaching the new recommenda­tions as far more deliberate and systematic than Trump’s original travel ban order, which was signed just days after he took office with little consultati­on or input outside the White House.

DHS said it had worked with other agencies to develop a comprehens­ive new baseline for foreign nationals based on factors like whether their countries issued passports with biometric informatio­n to prevent fraud and shared informatio­n about travellers’ terror-related and criminal histories.

“Our guiding principle,” Taylor said, “was this: We need to know who is coming into our country. We should be able to validate their identities, and we should be able to confirm that our foreign partners do have informatio­n suggesting such individual­s may represent a threat to the United States.”

The U.S. then shared the new baseline requiremen­ts with every foreign government in July and gave them 50 days to comply.

While most countries already met the standards, officials said some that didn’t have since made changes that put them in compliance.

Other countries, however, were unable or “deliberate­ly unwilling” to comply. Citizens of those countries would be denied entry or face other travel restrictio­ns until their government­s made changes.

Trump had originally tried to ban the entry of nationals from seven Muslim-majority countries, including Iraq, in his January order, but scaled back his efforts in a more narrowly tailored version written to better withstand legal scrutiny in March. Trump later derided that second order on Twitter as “watered down” and “politicall­y correct.”

After a bomb partially exploded on a London subway last week, Trump once again called for a tougher ban.

“The travel ban into the United States should be far larger, tougher and more specific — but stupidly, that would not be politicall­y correct!” he wrote on Twitter.

The administra­tion has argued the ban was necessary to give it time to complete a thorough review of screening procedures and informatio­n sharing to make sure that those who enter the country don’t pose a safety risk.

Critics accuse the president of oversteppi­ng his authority and violating the constituti­on’s protection­s against religious bias by targeting Muslims. Trump had called for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States” during his campaign.

The American Civil Liberties Union, one of the groups challengin­g the ban in court, described the proposed changes as “an apparent effort to paper over the original sin of the Muslim ban.”

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