Khaleej Times

Travel ban debate lingers on, but tone has softened

-

The Supreme Court’s ruling on President Trump’s proposed travel ban was certainly important on substance.

Via a nine-to-zero vote, high court justices allowed Trump to prohibit entry into the US of some (but not all) people from majority-Muslim countries he declares to be dangerous. But the ruling’s tone was significan­t as well. What it did not say may indicate volumes about the Supreme Court’s approach to this big, defining issue of the early Trump presidency.

The high court ruling did not try to tease out Trump’s thoughts from his angry tweets or outrageous campaign statements. It did not make judgments about the president’s personal attitude toward Muslims. In that respect it was different from lower court rulings that have blocked the ban from taking effect since the White House issued it in March.

That does not necessaril­y indicate that Trump will win — or lose — when the court hears full arguments on the case in the fall. What it does mean is that the Supreme Court does not want to match Trump’s normbustin­g, combative approach to the issue. They will treat him as being inherently the same as other recent US chief executives. That means they will give him wide latitude to make judgments about what is in the best interests of US national security. But they won’t cede him complete power on this important question.

“They dialled down the temperatur­e a few notches,” says Josh Blackman, an associate professor at the South Texas College of Law, who specialise­s in constituti­onal jurisprude­nce.

It’s important to remember that Monday’s action is only a preliminar­y round. The Supreme Court was considerin­g lower-court rulings that had held the proposed travel ban to be such an egregious infringeme­nt on religious rights that it needed to be prevented from taking effect on an immediate, emergency basis.

The high court both agreed and disagreed with this conclusion. On the one hand, Trump can’t ban from entry anyone with a “bona fide relationsh­ip” to the US, justices ruled. That includes foreigners with a job, spouse, or school in America. On the other hand, citizens of certain Muslim-majority countries without such a connection now can be barred from entry, effective immediatel­y. Many refugees may fall into this category.

The Supreme Court also accepted the travel ban case for full considerat­ion, with arguments to be held in the fall. That could set up a showdown between the president’s historic ability to set the nation’s national security priorities and the Constituti­on’s prohibitio­n against discrimina­tion on the basis of religious belief. Still, the arguments might never happen. “It’s possible the court will never rule on the case,” says Lyle Denniston, dean of the Supreme Court press corps and a legal expert at the National Constituti­on Center.

In any event, it’s now clear that the Supreme Court is approachin­g the issue in a somewhat different frame of mind than did lower federal circuit courts. That could explain, in part, the difference in their legal conclusion­s.

Circuit court judges who ruled on the issue often cited Trump’s nonpreside­ntial personalit­y as a basis for their decisions. They talked about and referred to his intemperat­e tweets and campaign speeches. Some lower court judges claimed that these means of communicat­ion showed, beyond a doubt, that Trump’s purpose was based in prejudice against Muslims, and not in a true concern to protect national security.

To some extent, these judges responded in kind. In May, the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit had harsh words for the president, saying his then-newly revised order “drips with religious intoleranc­e, animus and discrimina­tion.” That statement is “a bit over the top,” says Professor Blackman. Campaign statements are of necessity an exaggerate­d form of speech, and they haven’t before entered into a court’s considerat­ion of presidenti­al intentions, Blackman says. The Supreme Court recognises this, and nowhere cited Trump’s tweets or irregular speech. They returned to what Blackman calls a “presumptio­n of regularity”: this president is like any other. He won’t be treated as a unique danger, who demands a unique approach to the law.

“Trump could still lose. But it is done in regular order,” says the South Texas law professor.

Traditiona­lly the courts have given presidents great leeway on national security. Judges are reluctant to replace a chief executive’s judgment in this area with their own.

The problem is, says Denniston of the National Constituti­on Center, that Trump is different. For the Supreme Court, that’s the apparently unacknowle­dged elephant in the room. “I’m disappoint­ed there aren’t passing hints this president is not normal,” Denniston says.

Partisansh­ip might be in play here, of course. Political leanings play a role in court decisions, from the Supreme Court to federal circuit courts and down the line.

Chief Justice John Roberts would probably disagree with that — he works hard to try and shape decisions that do not appear to have been decided along strictly partisan lines. But judges are citizens, too.

Chief Justice John Roberts would probably disagree with that — he works hard to try and shape decisions that do not appear to have been decided along strictly partisan lines. But judges are citizens, too.

 ?? Peter Grier VIEW FROM WASHINGTON ??
Peter Grier VIEW FROM WASHINGTON

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates