The National - News

Trump to fight judges’ decision

Three state appeals courts decline to uphold travel ban on Muslim nations

- Rob Crilly Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

NEW YORK // US president Donald Trump says he will not back down after federal judges refused to reinstate his travel ban, accusing them of making a “political decision”.

“It’s a decision that we’ll win, in my opinion, very easily,” he said.

After his travel ban was successful­ly challenged by a lower court in Washington state, the three federal appeals court judges dealt Mr Trump a further setback by unanimousl­y ruling there was no reason to uphold his travel ban on seven mainly Muslim nations, saying there was no evidence of a risk to national security.

They declined to overturn the injunction imposed by the lower court, dismissing government arguments that the president could not be overruled on security matters. Mr Trump responded with the tweet: “SEE YOU IN COURT, THE SECURITY OF OUR NATION IS AT STAKE!” and promising to take further legal action. But Bob Ferguson, Washington state attorney general, was jubilant.

“Bottom line, this is a complete victory for the state of Washington,” he said. “The ninth circuit court of appeals in a unanimous decision effectivel­y granted everything we sought.”

Mr Trump’s opponents reacted with glee, saying the ruling reasserted the limits of the president’s power after he repeatedly used Twitter and public statements to condemn judges who ruled against him.

The three judges of the ninth circuit court of appeals in San Francisco said government lawyers failed to offer evidence of “irreparabl­e harm” if the ban on arrivals from Iran, Iraq, Syria Sudan, So- malia, Libya and Yemen were not reimposed. “The government has pointed to no evidence that any alien from any of the countries named in the order has perpetrate­d a terrorist attack in the United States,” they wrote.

“Rather than present evidence to explain the need for the executive order, the government has taken the position that we must not review its decision at all.” The Trump administra­tion must now decide whether to take the case to the supreme court, mount a challenge in a lower court or attempt to revise the executive order. The justice department said it was still considerin­g its next move.

Tightening controls on immigratio­n was a signature issue of Mr Trump’s run for the White House. During the campaign he promised to ban the entry of foreign Muslims to the US, although he later watered down the proposal.

At the end of his first week in office he indefinite­ly suspended the arrival of Syrian refugees and halted for 90 days the entry of travellers from seven countries on security grounds.

Protests erupted at airports and dozens of legal complaints were filed on behalf of people detained or deported.

The state of Washington argued that the executive order had directly harmed students at its universiti­es and divided families by stranding people overseas.

Reintroduc­ing the ban would bring fresh chaos, it said.

It also claimed the executive order’s focus on Muslims contravene­d constituti­onal pro- tections for religious groups. The emergency ruling, delivered 48 hours after the two sides presented 30 minutes of evidence, does not answer all those questions. Instead, the judges were ruling on whether the ban should be suspended while the legal cases proceeded.

In a strongly worded passage, they dismissed the government’s argument that judges had no right to review the president’s national security policy, saying that was “contrary to the fundamenta­l structure of our constituti­onal democracy”.

Campaigner­s said they would keep fighting the proposed ban but welcomed a stay which they said made sure families could be reunited on American soil.

Javier Valdes, co-executive director of Make the Road New York, which has led protests, said: “The fact that judges appointed by both Republican and Democratic presidents agreed to continue blocking this executive order demonstrat­es that this is not about party politics.”

But Margaret Huang, of Amnesty Internatio­nal, said the ruling would not end the turmoil and uncertaint­y for thousands of families.

“We’re concerned by reports that some border patrol agents are still subjecting people entering the US to discrimina­tory and unlawful treatment, and we fear that the Trump administra­tion may find other ways to discrimina­te based on religion,” she said. “Congress must step in and end this dangerous and discrimina­tory ban once and for all.”

 ?? Stephen Brashear / Getty Images ?? Washington state attorney general Bob Ferguson celebrates victory in Seattle after an appeals court refused to reinstate US president Donald Trump’s ban on travellers from seven predominan­tly Muslim nations.
Stephen Brashear / Getty Images Washington state attorney general Bob Ferguson celebrates victory in Seattle after an appeals court refused to reinstate US president Donald Trump’s ban on travellers from seven predominan­tly Muslim nations.

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