Trump travel ban fight heads toward
Supreme Court showdown
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[May 27, 2017]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The fate of
President Donald Trump's order to ban travelers from six predominantly
Muslim nations, blocked by federal courts, may soon be in the hands of
the conservative-majority Supreme Court, where his appointee Neil
Gorsuch could help settle the matter.
After the Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined on
Thursday to lift a Maryland federal judge's injunction halting the
temporary ban ordered by Trump on March 6, Attorney General Jeff
Sessions said the administration would appeal to the Supreme Court.
A second regional federal appeals court heard arguments on May 15 in
Seattle in the administration's appeal of a decision by a federal judge
in Hawaii also to block the ban. A ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals is pending.
The Justice Department has not made clear when the administration would
make its formal appeal or whether it would wait for the 9th Circuit
ruling before appealing.
If they take it up, the justices would be called upon to decide whether
courts should always defer to the president over allowing certain people
to enter the country, especially when national security is the stated
reason for an action as in this case. They also would have to decide if
Trump's order violated the U.S. Constitution's bar against the
government favoring one religion over another, as the ban's challengers
assert.
Gorsuch's April confirmation by the Republican-led Senate over
Democratic opposition restored the court's 5-4 majority, which means
that if all the conservative justices side with the administration the
ban would be restored regardless of how the four liberal justices vote.
During his Senate confirmation hearing, Gorsuch was questioned about
Trump's criticism of judges who ruled against the ban. Gorsuch avoided
commenting on the legal issue, saying only that he would not be "rubber
stamp" for any president.
While the justices could decide in the coming weeks whether to hear the
case, they likely would not hold oral arguments until late in the year,
with a ruling sometime after that. A final resolution may not come until
perhaps a year after Trump issued the executive order.
The justices are not required to hear any case, but this one meets
important criteria cited by experts, including that it would be the
federal government filing the appeal and that it involves a nationwide
injunction.
The administration could file an emergency application seeking to put
the order into effect while the litigation on its legality continues. At
least five justices must agree for any such request to be granted.
While the court could split 5-4 along ideological lines, it also is
possible some conservative justices could join the liberals in
overturning the travel ban, libertarian law professor Ilya Somin of
George Mason University said.
"Conservatives in other contexts often take a hard line against any kind
of government discrimination (based) on race or religion or the like,
even if the motivation may be benign. Also conservatives have concerns
about government infringements on religion," Somin said.
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A picture of the travel advisory page of Qatar Airways advising
passengers bound for the United States from seven newly banned
majority Muslim countries that they need to have either a U.S. green
card or diplomatic visa, January 28, 2017 in London, Britain.
Picture taken January 28, 2017. REUTERS/Russell Boyce
The 4th Circuit said the ban's challengers, including refugee
groups, in the case argued by the American Civil Liberties Union
were likely to succeed on their claim that the order violated the
Constitution's prohibition on the government favoring or disfavoring
any religion. In the 10-3 ruling, three Republican-appointed judges
dissented.
The Republican president's March 6 order, replacing an earlier Jan.
27 one also blocked by the courts, called for barring people from
Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen for 90 days while the
government implements stricter visa screening. It also called for
suspending all refugee admissions for 120 days.
KENNEDY'S REASONING
The travel ban's challengers may take some comfort from the appeals
court ruling's reliance on a concurring opinion in a 2015 Supreme
Court immigration case by Justice Anthony Kennedy, a conservative
who sometimes sides with the court's liberals in big cases.
In the 2015 case, Kennedy wrote that in the immigration context, the
government's actions can be questioned if there is evidence of bad
faith.
"As with any opinion by Justice Kennedy, I think the million-dollar
question is just what he meant in his concurrence, and this may be a
perfect case to find out," University of Texas School of Law
professor Stephen Vladeck said.
In Thursday's ruling, 4th Circuit Chief Judge Roger Gregory wrote
that the plaintiffs had shown there was "ample evidence" of bad
faith, which gave the green light to probe whether there were
reasons for the order other than the administration's stated
national security rationale.
The administration has argued the temporary travel ban was needed to
guard against terrorist attacks. Gregory wrote that the order uses
"vague words of national security, but in context drips with
religious intolerance, animus, and discrimination." Trump during the
presidential campaign called for a "total and complete shutdown of
Muslims entering the United States."
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Additional reporting by Andrew Chung
in New York; Editing by Will Dunham)
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