Business Standard

Trump travel ban dealt blow by San Francisco appeals court

- KARTIKAY MEHROTRA BLOOMBERG

President Donald Trump’s restrictio­ns on travel to the U.S. from six mostly Muslim countries, Venezuela and North Korea were largely struck down by a federal appeals court, raising uncertaint­y as the fight heads for a final showdown at the U.S. Supreme Court.

A regional appeals court based in San Francisco, one of two panels reviewing the third version of the president’s travel ban, concluded Friday that it continues to illegally discrimina­te against travellers just as earlier executive orders did. The three-judge panel also ruled, however, that Trump can continue to bar or limit entry by people from the Mideast and North African nations if they don’t have a relationsh­ip with a U.S.-based person or institutio­n.

The nation’s high court signaled on Dec. 5 that it may ultimately uphold the restrictio­ns that were issued in September when it allowed them to temporaril­y take full effect while the litigation play out. But there’s no guarantee the justices will allow the administra­tion to enforce the ban indefinite­ly after scrutinisi­ng it more thoroughly.

“For the third time, we are called upon to assess the legality of the president’s efforts to bar over 150 million nationals of six Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States or being issued immigrant visas that they would ordinarily be qualified to receive,” according to the panel, all of whose judges were appointed by President Bill Clinton. “We conclude that the president’s issuance of the proclamati­on once again exceeds the scope of his delegated authority.”

The dispute won’t return to the Supreme Court until after a Richmond, Virginia-based appeals court rules.

Friday’s ruling marks another victory for states, advocacy groups, technology companies and universiti­es that successful­ly challenged the first executive order and its replacemen­t as being at odds with nation’s founding principles and hurting the economy.

In a roiling legal battle that began in January, courts have had to weigh the president’s prerogativ­e to set policy on national security against allegation­s that he oversteppe­d his authority under federal immigratio­n law and violated the U.S. Constituti­on by targeting Muslims.

After multiple revisions to Trump’s initiative, the judges on the San Francisco court said the administra­tion still doesn’t comport with the law in how it has chosen to target nations it suspects of harbouring terrorists.

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