Trump's new travel ban raises bar for
legal challenges
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[March 07, 2017]
By Mica Rosenberg and Dan Levine
NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The new,
more narrowly tailored temporary travel ban President Donald Trump
signed on Monday will be more difficult to challenge successfully in
court, legal experts said.
They said that since his order no longer covers legal residents or
existing visa holders, and makes waivers possible for some business,
diplomatic and other travelers, challengers are likely to have a harder
time finding people in the United States who can legally claim they have
been harmed, and thus have so-called "standing" to sue.
Trump's first executive order signed on Jan. 27 banned travelers from
seven Muslim-majority nations - Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria
and Yemen - for 90 days and halted refugee admission for four months,
barring Syrian refugees indefinitely. Its hasty implementation caused
chaos and protests at airports. The order was hit with more than two
dozen lawsuits, many that claimed it discriminated against Muslims.
The new ban, which goes into effect on March 16, removes Iraq and adds
categories of people who would be exempt from the order. The Trump
administration said the executive order is necessary for national
security reasons.
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It also lists groups of people that could be eligible for waivers,
including travelers who have previously been admitted to the United
States for work or school, those seeking to visit or live with a close
relative and who would face hardship if denied entry; infants, young
children and adoptees or people in need of medical care, employees of
the U.S. government and international organizations among others.
All the exceptions make the new order "a lot harder to attack," said
Andrew Greenfield, an immigration attorney with Fragomen law firm in
Washington D.C.
Trump had promised to make the new directive harder to fight in court
and many of the changes were expected.
"They dotted their 'i's' and crossed their 't's' in trying to anticipate
what litigation might result," said Stephen Yale-Loehr, a Cornell Law
School professor who specializes in immigration. He said opponents might
still be able to find plaintiffs - a U.S. citizen could potentially sue
if the government denies a waiver to their foreign spouse for an
arbitrary reason, for example.
'DO OUR HOMEWORK'
In a legal challenge to the original order, the state of Washington was
successful in preventing it from being carried out. A federal judge in
Seattle and then an appeals court in San Francisco ruled that Washington
could claim standing, in part because the order adversely affected legal
permanent residents, known as green card holders, in the state. More
than 100 businesses, including many of the best-known tech companies,
filed briefs in court that argued their employees were harmed.
Bob Ferguson, the Attorney General for Washington State said on Monday
that he will likely decide on the next litigation steps this week after
consulting with state universities and businesses about potential harms.
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New American citizens take the Oath of Allegiance during a
naturalization ceremony in Newark, New Jersey, U.S., March 1, 2017.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
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"We need to do our homework and be thoughtful about this," Ferguson
said.
The U.S. Department of Justice, in a filing in Seattle federal court
on Monday, said the new order applies "only to those who are
overseas and without a visa."
Foreign nationals outside the country who do not have a U.S. visa do
not have the same protections under the U.S. Constitution as people
already here, legal experts said.
Rosemary Jenks, the director of Government Relations at NumbersUSA,
a conservative group that favors less immigration overall, said that
the new order would leave the state of Washington having to argue on
behalf of unidentified foreign nationals who have not been screened,
vetted or processed yet by U.S. authorities.
"That would be a pretty big stretch," Jenks said. And unlike the old
order, the new one lays out with more detail why the specific
countries were selected, she said.
Attorneys challenging the ban, including the American Civil
Liberties Union said there were still questions about whether or not
the ban is justified by national security reasons and the revisions
do not address concerns that the order discriminates based on
religion.
Adam Lauridsen, a Keker & Van Nest attorney in San Francisco
representing students challenging Trump's first order, noted the
revised directive still targets Muslim-majority countries.
Stephen Legomsky, chief counsel at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services in the previous Obama administration, pointed to statements
by Trump about wanting a Muslim ban.
"That evidence is baked in, you can't change the past," said
Legomsky. He said, however, that does not mean the inevitable legal
challenges will ultimately be successful in the likelihood that they
reach the U.S. Supreme Court. "It's not a slam dunk."
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(Reporting by Mica Rosenberg in New York and Dan Levine in San
Francisco; Editing by Sue Horton and Grant McCool)
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