The Jerusalem Post

Trump’s travel ban faces legal showdown

Conservati­ve-majority US Supreme Court to issue ruling by end of June

- • By LAWRENCE HURLEY

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The first big showdown at the US Supreme Court over President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies is set for Wednesday, when the justices will hear a challenge to the lawfulness of his travel ban targeting people from several Muslim-majority countries.

The case represents a test of the limits of presidenti­al power. Trump’s policy, announced in September, blocks entry into the United States of most people from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria and Yemen. Chad previously was on the list, but Trump lifted those restrictio­ns on April 10.

The high court has never decided the legal merits of the travel ban or any other major Trump immigratio­n policy, including his move to rescind protection­s for young immigrants – sometimes called “Dreamers” – brought into the US illegally as children. It has previously acted on Trump requests to undo lower court orders blocking those two policies, siding with him on the travel ban and opposing him on the Dreamers.

Trump’s immigratio­n policies – including actions taken against states and cities that protect illegal immigrants, intensifie­d deportatio­n efforts and limits on legal immigratio­n – have been among his most contentiou­s.

The conservati­ve-majority Supreme Court is due to hear arguments on Wednesday on the third version of a travel ban policy Trump first sought to implement a week after taking office in January 2017, and issue a ruling by the end of June.

The lead challenger is the state of Hawaii, which argues the ban violates federal immigratio­n law and the US Constituti­on’s prohibitio­n on the government favoring one religion over another.

“Right now, the travel ban is keeping families apart,” Hawaii Lt.-Gov. Doug Chin said in an interview. “It is degrading our values by subjecting a specific set of people to be denigrated and marginaliz­ed.”

The Supreme Court on December 4 signaled it may lean toward backing Trump when it granted the administra­tion’s request to let the ban go into full effect while legal challenges played out.

In another immigratio­n-related case, the justices on April 17 invalidate­d a provision in a US law requiring deportatio­n of immigrants convicted of certain crimes of violence. Trump’s administra­tion and the prior Obama administra­tion had defended the provision.

Trump has said the travel ban is needed to protect the United States from terrorism by Islamic terrorists. Just before the latest ban was announced, Trump wrote on Twitter that the restrictio­ns “should be far larger, tougher and more specific – but stupidly that would not be politicall­y correct!” THE CHALLENGER­S have argued the policy was motivated by Trump’s enmity toward Muslims, pressing that point in lower courts with some success by citing statements he made as a candidate and as president. As a candidate, Trump promised “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States.”

The Justice Department argues Trump’s statements as a candidate carry no weight because he was not yet president. The policy’s challenger­s also point to views he has expressed as president, including his re-tweets in November of anti-Muslim videos posted by a far-right British political figure.

In a court filing last week, US Solicitor General Noel Francisco, representi­ng Trump in court, said those re-tweets “do not address the meaning” of the travel ban policy.

Francisco cited Trump statements compliment­ary toward Muslims and Islam, including from a May 2017 speech in Saudi Arabia.

In defending the ban, the administra­tion has pointed to a waiver provision allowing people from targeted countries to seek entry if they meet certain criteria. The State Department said that as of last month, 375 waivers to the travel ban had been granted since the policy went into effect on December 8.

Some former Republican senators and officials who served in Republican former president George W. Bush’s administra­tion have signed onto legal briefs asking the high court to invalidate the ban.

“I think the travel ban is a terribly misguided policy that appeared to be motivated more by a political intention of the president than by any real national security need,” John Bellinger, the State Department’s top legal adviser during the Bush administra­tion, said in an interview.

The arguments in the case follow US missile strikes this month in one of the targeted countries, Syria, after Trump’s administra­tion blamed President Bashar Assad for a chemical weapons attack on Syrian people near Damascus.

“Lots of people have pointed out the hypocrisy of the president on the one hand being willing to bomb Syria and on the other hand being unwilling to accept refugees and immigrants from that country who are trying to escape,” lawyer Omar Jadwat of the American Civil Liberties Union, which challenged the travel ban in a separate case in Maryland, said in an interview.

Venezuela and North Korea also were targeted in the travel ban but those restrictio­ns were not challenged in court.

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