16 Mar 2017
WASHINGTON President Donald Trump insists his amended travel ban will survive any legal challenge and it’s time to see if he’s right, with the first court hearings on it scheduled for Wednesday.
“SEE YOU IN COURT,” Trump tweeted after his first executive order on immigration was stayed by a judge, 3 February.
It would seem people have taken him at his word, given the number of complaints — by states and rights groups — filed against his travel ban. The new iteration is supposed to take effect Thursday.
It bars all refugees from entering the US for 120 days and halts the granting of new visas for travellers from six mostly-Muslim nations: Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen for 90 days. Iraq was dropped from the initial list.
Two federal courts, one in Hawaii and another in Maryland, have scheduled hearings for Wednesday on the new measure, the most controversial of Trump’s young administration. A hearing could also come as soon as Wednesday in a third challenge filed by six US states.
The White House reworked the first executive order to address some of the issues that came up in court. The revised order explicitly exempts holders of valid visas or legal permanent residents, for instance.
But the main points are largely the same.
The first version of the order, which Trump signed on 27 January, triggered howls of protest at home and abroad as well as chaos at US airports as people were detained upon arrival and either held for hours or sent back to where they came from.
The White House was roundly attacked for what critics said was a hasty rollout and a glaring lack of coordination with the agencies tasked with enforcing the ban.
In recent days the president and his leading cabinet members — Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and John Kelly, the homeland security secretary — have defended the new order as a vital tool to preserve US national security and keep out extremists.
But critics say the order essentially remains a ban on Muslims and therefore unconstitutional as it singles out people of a certain religion for discriminatory treatment.
Since 11 September, 2001, the worst attacks in the United States have been committed either by radicalised Americans or by people from countries not on the Trump travel ban list.