If the potential consequences -- security on one hand, humanity on the other -- 
were not so grave, it would be fun to just enjoy the popcorn....

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/state-dept-reverses-visa-revocations-allows-banned-travelers-to-enter-us/2017/02/04/0ab5880a-eaee-11e6-bf6f-301b6b443624_story.html?utm_term=.02e0ac4ff305

State Dept. reverses visa revocations, allows barred travelers to enter U.S.
The Department of Homeland Security complied with a judge’s orders Saturday and 
stopped enforcing President Trump’s controversial travel ban, and the 
fast-moving legal dispute over the president’s powers could land at the 
nation’s highest court.

On Saturday evening, Trump administration lawyers filed a notice to appeal a 
Seattle federal judge’s decision from Friday night that imposed a temporary, 
nationwide halt to Trump’s order barring refugees and those from seven 
majority-Muslim nations from entering the country.

While his administration followed the orders of U.S. District Judge James L. 
Robart, the president blasted out his unhappiness with an extraordinarily 
personal criticism.

“The opinion of this so-called judge, which essentially takes law-enforcement 
away from our country, is ridiculous and will be overturned!” Trump said in a 
Saturday morning tweet. On a weekend trip to Florida, Trump went off to play 
golf then returned to Twitter in the afternoon to say “many very bad and 
dangerous people may be pouring into our country” because of the judicial 
decision.

[Trump lashes out at ‘so-called judge’ who temporarily blocked travel ban]

Trump exaggerated the impact of Robart’s order, and Democrats charged that the 
president was trying to intimidate the independent judiciary. “The president’s 
hostility toward the rule of law is not just embarrassing, it is dangerous,” 
Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) said in a statement.

The State Department said that those with valid visas could enter the country. 
DHS said it would “resume inspection of travelers in accordance with standard 
policy and procedure” that existed before Trump’s more restrictive executive 
order.

Advocates encouraged travelers from the affected countries who qualified for 
entry to get on planes as soon as possible because of the unpredictable legal 
terrain.

The developments continued what has been a chaotic rollout of Trump’s order, 
made on Jan 27. More than a dozen legal challenges have been filed around the 
country, and only one judge so far has indicated that he was willing to let 
Trump’s order stand.

The decision of Robart, who was nominated by President George W. Bush and has 
been on the bench since 2004, was the most consequential because of its 
national implications.

It is somewhat unusual for a district judge to issue an order that affects the 
entire country, but Robart said it was necessary to follow Congress’s intention 
that “the immigration laws of the United States should be enforced vigorously 
and uniformly.”

He was quoting from a 2015 appeals court ruling that had blocked President 
Barack Obama’s executive action that would have made it easier for undocumented 
immigrants in this country to remain. It was never implemented because of legal 
challenges.

[Travelers from Iran board flights to the United States following stay, 
attorney says]

Justice Department lawyers were preparing to immediately ask the U.S. Court of 
Appeals for the 9th Circuit to dissolve Robart’s order, but had not filed 
anything as of Saturday evening. It will go to a panel of judges who consider 
such emergency requests, and that decision could be crucial.

While the losing side can then request intervention from the Supreme Court, it 
would take the votes of five justices to overturn the panel decision. The court 
has been shorthanded since the death of Justice Antonin Scalia nearly a year 
ago, and ideologically divided between four liberal and four conservative 
members.

The issue could reach the high court in days — or weeks.

Robart granted a request from attorneys for the states of Washington and 
Minnesota who had asked him to stop the government from acting on critical 
sections of Trump’s order. Justice and State department officials had revealed 
earlier Friday that about 60,000 — and possibly as many as 100,000 — visas 
already have been provisionally revoked as a result of Trump’s order.

A U.S. official who spoke on the condition of anonymity said that because of 
the court case, officials would examine the revoking of those visas so that 
people would be allowed to travel.

Robart’s order also enjoined the government from enforcing a section of the 
executive order that bars the entry of Syrian refugees.

The State Department said it is still working with other government agencies 
and the organizations that process refugees overseas to comply with the judge’s 
order. That means the action may not immediately help those seeking approval. 
Immigration lawyers said the State Department had informed them they should 
rebook trips for refugees whose plans were canceled after the executive order, 
which temporarily halted the refu­gee resettlement program.

On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security said it would allow 872 
refugees into the country who were “already in transit” and would face “undue 
hardship” if denied admission.

“This ruling is another stinging rejection of President Trump’s 
unconstitutional Muslim ban,” said Omar Jadwat, director of the American Civil 
Liberties Union’s Immigrants’ Rights Project. “We will keep fighting to 
permanently dismantle this un-American executive order.”

Trump’s criticism of Robart reminded some of his remarks during the 
presidential campaign about the impartiality of a California federal judge who 
was hearing a class-action lawsuit involving Trump University.

Others counted that Obama had also been critical of judicial decisions he did 
not like — scolding the Supreme Court during a State of the Union address for 
its decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, and saying 
during the legal battle over the Affordable Care Act that it would be 
“unprecedented” to strike it down.

But Trump’s denunciation of Robart was more personal and direct. Vice President 
Pence defended the president’s words in an interview with George Stephanopoulos 
that will air on ABC’s “This Week.”

“I think the American people are very accustomed to this president speaking his 
mind and speaking very straight with them,” Pence said.

He agreed with Stephanopoulos that Robart had the authority for his ruling, and 
said “we’ll go through the process in the courts to get a stay of that order, 
so that, again, we can implement this action that is entirely focused on the 
safety and security of the American people.”

Other Republican leaders were mute, on both the decision and Trump’s language, 
and some in the GOP were unsettled by it.

“My advice to POTUS — attack the decision (it’s weak) not the judge,” Rep. Raúl 
R. Labrador (R-Idaho), who had backed Trump’s immigration order, wrote on 
Twitter. “Liberals are imploding, don’t make personal attacks the story.”

Democrats were not shy. “The president’s attack . . . shows a disdain for an 
independent judiciary that doesn’t always bend to his wishes and a continued 
lack of respect for the Constitution,” Senate Minority Leader Charles E. 
Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a statement.

Leahy said Trump “seems intent on precipitating a constitutional crisis.”

The legal battles over Trump’s immigration order have become the mirror image 
of Obama’s attempt to shield illegal immigrants after Congress failed to pass 
comprehensive immigration reform.

Local Politics Alerts
Breaking news about local government in D.C., Md., Va.
Obama’s executive action would have deferred deportation for millions of 
undocumented immigrants who had been in the country since 2010, had not 
committed any serious crimes and had family ties to U.S. citizens or others 
lawfully in the country.

In that case, Republican state attorneys general led the fight against the 
order. A district judge in Texas agreed with them that it probably exceeded the 
president’s powers, and issued a nationwide injunction. The U.S. Court of 
Appeals for the 5th Circuit agreed; months after that, the Supreme Court took 
up the issue.

But the court deadlocked, meaning that the lower court ruling stood and the 
Obama administration suffered one of its most consequential legal defeats.

The players have changed sides now, with Democratic attorneys general and 
immigrant rights groups leading the fight against Trump and celebrating a 
district judge’s imposition of a nationwide order.

Anne Gearan, Abigail Hauslohner, Katie Zezima, Spencer S. Hsu and Karen DeYoung 
contributed to this report.



Sent from my iPhone

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