[A reasonable, objective observer—enlightened by the specific
historical context, contemporaneous public statements, and specific
sequence of events leading to its issuance—would conclude that the
Executive Order was issued with a purpose to disfavor a particular
religion, in spite of its stated, religiously-neutral purpose.]

http://www.vox.com/2017/3/15/14940586/travel-ban-unconstitutional-muslim-hawaii

A Hawaii judge has just blocked President Trump’s revised travel ban
Shockingly, Trump is displeased.
Updated by Dara [email protected]  Mar 15, 2017, 9:00pm EDT

Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images

A federal judge on Wednesday stopped President Trump’s second attempt
to temporarily ban visa holders from several majority-Muslim countries
— and nearly all refugees — from entering the United States, hours
before it was supposed to take effect. The ruling found that the order
likely violates a constitutional prohibition against religious
discrimination.

It was a scathing rebuke for an order that administration officials
spent weeks reworking, in hopes of avoiding the judicial blockade that
the first attempt sailed into in January.

Trump immediately panned it, in a speech in Tennessee. “This is, in
the opinion of many, an unprecedented judicial overreach,” he said.

The temporary restraining order came from federal judge Derrick K.
Watson, of the District of Hawaii. It prevents the Trump
administration from going forward with its plan to stop issuing visas
to residents of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen; to stop
allowing refugees to enter the US for 120 days; and to cut the US’s
total refugee quota for the current fiscal year (which ends in
September) in half.

The worst news for the administration is that the ruling suggests
future revisions of the ban won’t help its chances of survival. Watson
declared that the travel ban is, for all intents and purposes, a
Muslim ban — that its reason for being fundamentally violates the
First Amendment:

***A reasonable, objective observer—enlightened by the specific
historical context, contemporaneous public statements, and specific
sequence of events leading to its issuance—would conclude that the
Executive Order was issued with a purpose to disfavor a particular
religion, in spite of its stated, religiously-neutral purpose.***
[Emphasis added.]

The refugee and visa ban was the first major policy that Trump put
into effect — but at this point, it’s been tied up in court for much
longer than it was actually in force. After a week of widespread
airport chaos and detentions, and contradictory legal interpretations
from within the federal government, the original version of the order
was put on legal hold.

After a series of defeats in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals (the
same circuit where Wednesday’s ruling came down), the administration
took the unusual step of all but conceding defeat, and the even more
unusual step of seeking input from the rest of the federal government
in order to tighten the legal and policy case for the ban.

It does not appear to have worked. Unless overturned by a higher
court, Watson’s ruling means the administration won’t get the chance
to demonstrate a smoother rollout of the travel ban, as it was
planning to do Tuesday. And it might never get the chance to put visas
and refugees on hold, at all.

The ruling is the clearest indication yet that the courts will see the
travel ban as a Muslim ban

The temporary restraining order, like those issued by other federal
judges against the original ban (which ultimately inspired the Trump
administration to give up and try again with this version), is
designed to keep the status quo in place while the case against the
order makes its way through the courts. It’s not a ruling that the
executive order is unconstitutional.

But the text of Watson’s order makes it pretty clear that he thinks
the order violates the First Amendment’s establishment clause.

This was something judges were a little more leery of during the first
round of travel ban fights. The state argued that Trump’s executive
order should be seen as the “Muslim ban” that candidate Trump promised
on the campaign trail. The federal government has denied this at every
turn — pointing out, for example, that most Muslim visa holders don’t
come from the six blacklisted countries.

Judge Watson was not having it:

The notion that one can demonstrate animus toward any group of people
only by targeting all of them at once is fundamentally flawed. The
Court declines to relegate its Establishment Clause analysis to a
purely mathematical exercise.

But the federal government can’t write the allegation of animus out of
the text of an executive order. And if Judge Watson, and the other
judges hearing challenges to travel ban 2.0, sides with the state of
Hawaii and the other travel ban challengers, the first big policy of
the Trump administration will be permanently sunk.

The federal government is likely to try to get the hold revoked by a
higher court — just as it did with the original executive order.
Trump’s Department of Justice refused to commit to such a step
Wednesday, but Trump himself told a crowd, at a Nashville rally, that
he was going to fight the case all the way to the Supreme Court if he
needed to.

Trump also said that he preferred the first version of the travel ban
— and called the revised version, the one that his lawyers had
painstakingly worked to put together, merely a “watered-down” version
of the original.

In other words, he continued to make Watson’s case — that the revised
executive order, despite its efforts to make a national-security case
for selecting the 6 blacklisted countries, is just a further attempt
to make a Muslim ban look constitutionally passable — for him.


 Follow
 Steve Kopack ✔ @SteveKopack
Trump says he wanted to bring the first travel ban that was blocked to
the Supreme Court. "We ought to go back to the first one!"
6:18 AM - 16 Mar 2017
  1 1 Retweet   4 4 likes

If Trump wants to keep fighting for the “watered-down” ban, he’s going
to have to go through the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals — the very
same court that kept the first travel ban on hold. On Wednesday, the
Ninth Circuit announced that it had decided not to reconsider that
ruling with a fuller panel of judges (at least one judge on the bench
had asked for it, but the majority of judges on the circuit wanted to
let the first ruling stand).

In other words, the whole Ninth Circuit, more or less, agreed that the
first version of Trump’s travel ban was impermissible, just as the
president himself said the second one was just an inferior version of
the first.

Taken together, Watson’s order, Trump’s reaction, and the Ninth
Circuit’s retrenchment aren’t a final shutdown of the visa and refugee
ban. But they’re not a simple pause either.



-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to