Los Angeles Times

The travel ban that won’t die

The Supreme Court gives legal backing to Trump’s foolish and counterpro­ductive policy.

-

The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that the third iteration of President Trump’s travel ban on people from several mostly Muslim countries was facially neutral and that the government had “set forth a sufficient national security justificat­ion” for the policy. That’s the threshold the ban needed to meet to pass legal muster. But only an amnesiac would forget the clear animus toward immigrants — with a special nasty focus on Muslims — that Trump exhibited on the campaign trail and that propelled this foolish and counterpro­ductive policy.

One of the first things Trump did after taking office was to act on his campaign statement that he wanted a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims” entering the U.S. That position was forged in reaction to internatio­nal terrorism by Islamic extremists, including the San Bernardino massacre by an American-born Muslim and his Pakistani wife, as well as the then-raging war against Islamic State. And it was based on clear and deplorable perception­s among Trump and his nativist advisors that the actions of the few indict the many. “I think Islam hates us,” Trump said in 2016. “There’s a tremendous hatred there.”

After several court battles sent him back to the drawing board, Trump finally signed the narrowly tailored travel ban that was at issue in Tuesday’s ruling. The administra­tion framed it in a national security context and said the countries from which travelers were banned had failed to share sufficient informatio­n for U.S. officials to determine whether potential travelers posed a threat. That ban applied to six predominan­tly Muslim nations — Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia and Chad (which was later removed) — as well as to North Korea and certain government officials from Venezuela.

Significan­tly, the court held that while most of the countries targeted by Trump’s ban are predominan­tly Muslim, “that fact alone does not support an inference of religious hostility, given that the policy covers just 8% of the world’s Muslim population and is limited to countries that were previously designated by Congress or prior administra­tions as posing national security risks.” So the president managed to affix a large enough fig leaf to hide his bias.

As policy, though, the ban is awful. It creates a broad exclusion for U.S. entry based on discrimina­tory misconcept­ions and punishes entire nations for the misdeeds of a few. And it doesn’t even get the nations right. The countries targeted are not responsibl­e for the fatal terrorist attacks that have occurred in recent years. The Sept. 11 attackers were primarily from Saudi Arabia, and terrorist attacks in Europe were committed primarily by Europeans who embraced Islamic extremism. The linkage between terrorist acts and the banned nations is unreasonab­le, as is this policy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States