Manawatu Standard

Court rightfully blocks travel ban

- LOS ANGELES TIMES

Thank God that at least part of the government is functionin­g as it ought to.

On Thursday, a three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a temporary freeze on the president’s misguided ban on travel from seven mostly Muslim countries and his suspension of refugee resettleme­nts.

Ostensibly, President Trump wants to suspend the refugee programme and freeze immigratio­n from the seven countries in order to give his administra­tion time to review how the government vets visa and asylum requests. It would be foolish not to assess how such programmes are working on a regular basis – that’s basic government­al accountabi­lity.

But absent evidence that the nation faces heightened risk under the current system, it should continue letting people who qualify for visas receive them, and provide asylum for refugees who deserve it. That the nation has not suffered a fatal terror attack by an immigrant from those seven countries since the vetting processes were tightened after 9/11 puts the lie to Trump’s panicky assertion that we face a great and imminent peril. Further, as the Cato Institute reported, only 20 of 154 people identified as foreignbor­n terrorists between 1975 and 2015 came from among the 3.3 million refugees settled here during that time. Those individual­s caused the deaths of three victims. Although any murder is to be decried, those statistics hardly support the level of alarm we see from our anguished president.

The damage Trump’s polices would cause exceeds whatever bit of good he can claim. Islamic State recruits in part by saying the West is at war with Islam, and Trump plays right into that group’s hands first with his rhetoric, and then with a travel ban affecting only majority Muslim countries. His policy strains relations with allies and disrupts the lives of countless people involved with businesses, universiti­es, cultural programmes and other endeavours that rely on internatio­nal travel. And putting the refugee programme on hiatus adds a layer of cruelty and frustratio­n to the lives of people who have already been uprooted from their homes and forced to live as squatters in refugee camps or foreign cities while waiting to find a new place to call home.

Trump recently said the abrupt halt on visitors and immigrants was insisted on by his lawenforce­ment advisors. He initially wanted to give travellers a month’s notice, the president asserted, but he was persuaded that the delay would let terrorists swarm in before the ban took effect. That doesn’t pass the sniff test – refugees undergo up to two years of vetting, and visas for visitors and immigrants take weeks to process. There could be no such rush. The saddest part of Trump’s explanatio­n is that Americans can’t be certain that their president, in the face of global backlash, wasn’t lying to blame others for the botched rollout.

Trump has framed his executive actions within a terrorism context, but they are part of an isolationi­st worldview descending on Washington that the nation hasn’t seen since the build up to World War II. The United States has used immigratio­n to build a vibrant, economical­ly successful society – among the wealthiest in world history. Yet Trump has slashed the number of refugees the US will accept this fiscal year from the Obama-approved 110,000 to 50,000. As a candidate, Trump pledged to cut legal, non-refugee immigratio­n as well.

Recent bills introduced in Congress would cut in half the annual allotment of nearly 1 million green cards an effort that increases American diversity.

Trump, and the people who have his ear, seek a less cosmopolit­an and less diverse nation. This is a dangerousl­y inward-looking view. America’s brightest future is through growth, both economical­ly and in population. If there are any longterm thinkers in the Trump administra­tion, they need to impress that on their boss before he causes too much harm.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand