Fired: Trump dumps top lawyer who defied
immigration order
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[January 31, 2017]
By Roberta Rampton and Julia Edwards Ainsley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump fired top federal government lawyer Sally Yates on Monday
after she took the extraordinarily rare step of defying the White House
and refused to defend new travel restrictions targeting seven
Muslim-majority nations.
It was another dramatic twist in the unusually raucous roll-out of
Trump's directive that put a 120-day hold on allowing refugees into the
country, an indefinite ban on refugees from Syria and a 90-day bar on
citizens from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.
The Friday night ban prompted protests and chaos at airports on the
weekend as customs officials struggled to put the order into practise,
and the fallout spread to U.S. markets on Monday, where stocks suffered
their biggest drop of 2017 and companies affected by the change spoke
out against it.
Yates said late on Monday that the Justice Department would not defend
the order against court challenges, saying that she did not believe it
would be "consistent with this institution's solemn obligation to always
seek justice and stand for what is right."
Hours later, she was fired. The White House said Yates "has betrayed the
Department of Justice by refusing to enforce a legal order designed to
protect the citizens of the United States" and portrayed her actions as
political.
Trump has argued tougher vetting of immigrants is needed to protect
America from terror attacks but critics complain that his order unfairly
singles out Muslims and defiles America's historic reputation as a
welcoming place for immigrants.
Yates, an appointee of former Democratic President Barack Obama, was
days away from being replaced by Trump's pick for the top spot at the
Justice Department, Republican Senator Jeff Sessions, who is awaiting
Senate confirmation.
"Ms. Yates is an Obama Administration appointee who is weak on borders
and very weak on illegal immigration," the White House said in a
statement.
The White House said that Dana Boente, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern
District of Virginia, was sworn in at 9 p.m. ET and would be acting U.S.
attorney general until Sessions is approved.
Boente said in an interview with the Washington Post that he would
enforce the immigration order.
DRAMA
There have been only a handful of instances in U.S. history of top
Justice Department officials publicly breaking with the White House.
The most famous example was in 1973, when then-Attorney General Elliot
Richardson and his deputy resigned rather than obey President Richard
Nixon’s order to fire a special prosecutor investigating the Watergate
scandal.
The incident, which became known as the "Saturday Night Massacre," was a
public relations disaster and is seen as a turning point in Nixon's
administration.
The drama at the Justice Department is another sign of how hastily
Trump's immigration order was developed and how little it was reviewed
by the agencies now grappling to implement it.
The White House said key government officials were briefed before Trump
signed the order on Friday, but there was little coordination or
consultation, resulting in confusion. Most State Department officials
found out about it from media reports.
Officials from the State Department circulated a draft memo of dissent
on Monday, saying Trump's move would hurt America's image abroad and
inflame anti-American sentiment.
White House spokesman Sean Spicer dismissed the memo. "These career
bureaucrats have a problem with it? I think that they should either get
with the program or they can go," he told reporters at his daily
briefing.
An internal Department of Homeland Security document seen by Reuters
showed 348 visa holders were kept from boarding U.S.-bound flights this
week, and more than 200 people came to the United States but were denied
entry.
More than 735 people were pulled aside for questioning by U.S. Customs
and Border Protection officers at airports, including 394 green card
holders, who are legal permanent residents of the United States, the
document said.
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U.S. Deputy Attorney General Sally Quillian Yates testifies during a
Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Trump's administration is granting waivers from the refugee ban to
allow 872 people into the country this week - refugees that had
already been cleared for resettlement in the United States and were
in transit when the order came out.
Tens of thousands of people protested Trump's order in major
American cities and at airports on the weekend.
Obama took the rare step of weighing in, saying through a spokesman
that he was heartened by the political activism on the issue.
Employees of Alphabet Inc's Google in San Francisco, Mountain View,
Seattle and other cities held protests. Backed by a sign that said
"We are a nation of immigrants," Sergei Brin, president of Alphabet,
said he was outraged by the order.
"The U.S. had the courage to take me and my family in as refugees,”
he said in a YouTube video of his remarks.
TECH BACKING FOR COURT CHALLENGES
Federal judges blocked deportation of those detained under the order
through the weekend, and more lawsuits were filed on Monday.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations, the country's biggest
Muslim advocacy group, filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of more
than 20 people.
Washington state filed a lawsuit, arguing that Trump’s order
violates the equal protection clause and the First Amendment of the
U.S. Constitution. Several other Democratic state attorneys general
have said they are considering legal action.
"It is an insult and a danger to all of the people of the state of
Washington, of all faiths," Washington state Governor Jay Inslee, a
Democrat, told reporters.
Amazon.com Inc and Expedia Inc, both of which are based in
Washington state's Seattle area, are supporting the state's suit.
Amazon scrapped a business trip for a senior company lawyer who was
born in Libya but has UK citizenship, according to a declaration
filed in support of the lawsuit. Forty-nine of its employees were
born in one of the banned countries, and seven new hires may need to
be placed in offices outside the United States, it said.
A declaration from Expedia said the order could impact the travel
itineraries of at least 1,000 customers, costing it refunds as well
as expenses to monitor how the order is applied and who exactly is
affected.
The U.S. technology industry, a major employer of foreign workers,
has been the most vocal corporate opponent to Trump's order. A group
of top companies plans to meet on Tuesday to discuss how best to
support legal challenges. [L1N1FL04H]
(Additional reporting by Dan Levine and Jeffrey Dastin in San
Francisco, Eric Beech, Doina Chiacu, Arshad Mohammed, Susan Heavey,
Mark Hosenball and Patricia Zengerle in Washington, Jonathan Allen
in New York, Brian Snyder in Boston, and Sharon Bernstein in
Sacramento; Writing by Roberta Rampton and Alistair Bell; Editing by
Bernadette Baum, Bill Rigby and Nick Macfie)
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