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		Trump administration asks top court to 
		restore asylum order 
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		 [December 12, 2018] 
		By Andrew Chung 
 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's 
		administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday to let his order 
		barring asylum for immigrants who enter the United States illegally take 
		effect even as litigation over the matter proceeds.
 
 The U.S. Justice Department asked the court to lift a temporary 
		restraining order against the asylum rules issued by San Francisco-based 
		U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar. Trump has taken a hard line toward legal 
		and illegal immigration since taking office last year.
 
 Citing what he called an overwhelmed immigration system, Trump issued a 
		proclamation on Nov. 9 that authorities process asylum claims only for 
		migrants crossing the southern U.S. border at an official port of entry. 
		Tigar blocked the rules on Nov. 19, drawing Trump's ire.
 
 The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused on 
		Friday to lift Tigar's injunction pending an appeal by the 
		administration, saying the government "has not established that it is 
		likely to prevail."
 
 The Justice Department said in its request to the Supreme Court that the 
		injunction frustrated the government's effort to re-establish control 
		over the southern border and reduce illegal crossings.
 
		
		 
		Trump issued his proclamation alongside a new administration rule that 
		effectively prohibited asylum for migrants crossing from Mexico outside 
		a port of entry. The policy came as the government sought ways to block 
		thousands of Central Americans traveling in caravans to escape violence 
		and poverty at home from entering the United States.
 Immigrant rights groups immediately sued, arguing the policy violated 
		federal immigration and administrative law.
 
 In his ruling, Tigar said Congress clearly mandated that immigrants were 
		eligible for asylum regardless of where they enter the country.
 
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			Dunia, an asylum seeker from Honduras, is reunited with her 
			five-year-old son Wilman at Brownsville South Padre International 
			Airport in Brownsville, Texas, U.S., following their separation of 
			more than five weeks through the Trump administration's "Zero 
			Tolerance" policy, July 20, 2018. REUTERS/Loren Elliott/File Photo 
            
			 
            The ruling prompted Trump to blast the 9th Circuit as a "disgrace" 
			and dismiss Tigar as an "Obama judge." Tigar was appointed to the 
			bench by former President Barack Obama, a Democrat.
 That criticism led to an extraordinary rebuke by U.S. Chief Justice 
			John Roberts, who issued a public response to Trump.
 
 "We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton 
			judges," said Roberts, a conservative who was appointed by 
			Republican former President George W. Bush.
 
 (Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York; Editing by Will Dunham and 
			Peter Cooney)
 
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