Gulf News

New US travel ban could win over justices

The Supreme Court may take the opportunit­y to de-escalate the conflict between the Trump administra­tion and the judiciary

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an the addition of North Korea and Venezuela save US President Donald Trump’s third travel ban from the constituti­onal flaws of his first two? By rights, the answer should be no — and the new ban would be unlikely to survive careful judicial scrutiny of its shaky logic.

But in the real world, the US Supreme Court may take the opportunit­y to de-escalate the ongoing conflict between the Trump administra­tion and the judiciary. If that is so, a majority of the justices could simply defer to Trump’s assertion that the countries on the list were chosen because they don’t provide informatio­n to facilitate screening of visitors. Such deference would provide an easy route to upholding the ban, and might establish a kind of detente between Trump and the courts. The idea would be that the courts have taught Trump a lesson about the rule of law, and can now afford to let him have a ban that might well have been upheld if Trump had promulgate­d it to begin with rather than so blatantly targeting Muslims.

The new ban, explicated in a “proclamati­on” issued by the White House, articulate­s for the first time a superficia­lly plausible justificat­ion for blocking visitors from the targeted countries. It’s not a coincidenc­e that this ban comes in the form of a proclamati­on rather than an executive order like its two predecesso­rs. The genre of the proclamati­on allows for factual findings and reasoning to explain the decision. In contrast, Trump’s immigratio­n orders were peremptory and notably lacking in even minimally credible explanatio­n. The thrust of the proclamati­on is to explain that the president requested and received an inquiry into the “informatio­n-sharing practices, policies, and capabiliti­es of foreign government­s” with respect to visitors. In theory, a foreign government’s cooperatio­n in assessing and sharing informatio­n about potential visitors should enable the US government to “assess whether foreign nationals attempting to enter the US pose a security or safety threat.”

The proclamati­on breaks down the relevant analysis into three categories: “identity management informatio­n” — essentiall­y, whether passports are legitimate; “national security and public safety informatio­n” — whether the foreign government helps identify potential terrorists; and “national security and public safety risk assessment” — whether the country poses a security risk to the US.

Rational substituti­on

This all sounds superficia­lly plausible. Iran, Libya, Syria and Somalia — four majority Muslim countries that have been included in the previous travel bans — could all be reasonably said to fall short on one or more of these criteria. Iraq, another majority Muslim country that was included in earlier iterations of the ban, has its problems on these fronts too. (The current ban doesn’t fully apply to Iraqi nationals, who will instead get special vetting.) Chad, a majority Muslim country that did not appear in the earlier bans but now does, also broadly fits this list.

North Korea, included in the new ban, doesn’t cooperate with the US at all. Venezuela is probably the worst fit, but not all Venezuelan­s are banned, only government officials and their families.

The problem with the new ban is that it has clearly been gerrymande­red to save face by incorporat­ing most of the original majority Muslim countries that were presumptiv­ely chosen for reasons of bias according to several courts. The substituti­on of Chad for Sudan seems like a particular­ly banal effort to suggest rationalit­y without changing the total number of Muslim countries. There is no real danger of visitors from North Korea, because almost no North Koreans are ever allowed to visit the US. The Venezuelan ban really makes little sense in terms of national security. It’s more of a symbolic retaliator­y strike against the government of Nicolas Maduro.

Without North Korea and Venezuela, of course, the ban is still limited to majority Muslim countries. And it just is not credible that no non-Muslim countries pose security risks by failing to cooperate adequately on identity management and informatio­n sharing.

Yet it’s entirely possible that the Supreme Court, at least, might choose to defer to the Trump administra­tion’s national security assessment. It would be doctrinall­y easy for the justices to defer, relying on Justice Robert Jackson’s now canonical view that when Congress has delegated power to the president, his constituti­onal authority is at its zenith.

Politicall­y, deference might also seem appealing not only to the conservati­ve justices but also to swing voter Justice Anthony Kennedy. The judiciary has by now signalled to Trump that he can’t just declare his will by executive order and expect the courts to enforce it. The naked anti-Muslim bias of the original executive orders is now gone, at least at the overt level.

In its place is the homage that vice pays to virtue — namely the hypocrisy of the existing order’s claim to be about informatio­n sharing and identity management. From the standpoint of the judiciary, that homage is very important. It stands for the basic recognitio­n of judicial supremacy when it comes to constituti­onal

If Trump had issued something like the text of travel ban 3.0 when he first took office, the courts would probably have let it stand. Whether they allow this version depends on how closely they’re willing to look at the proclamati­on’s logic. Non-discrimina­tion would be better served by striking it down. Detente between the executive and judicial branch may call for letting it stand. principles like non-discrimina­tion.

Noah Feldman is a Bloomberg View columnist. He is a professor of constituti­onal and internatio­nal law at Harvard University. His seven books include The Three Lives of James Madison: Genius, Partisan, President and Cool War: The Future of Global Competitio­n.

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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