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What Does Trump’s New Travel Ban Mean for the Supreme Court?


Tuesday September 26, 2017

The now-on-hold oral arguments on Trump’s travel ban were expected to be a major showdown on questions of immigration, religious discrimination, and Presidential power.Photograph by Matthew Busch / Getty


On Monday afternoon, the Supreme Court issued an order removing oral arguments in Trump v. Hawaii and Trump v. International Refugee Assistance Project—the travel-ban cases—from its calendar, until further notice.

The arguments, which had been consolidated, were scheduled to be heard on October 10th; now both sides have until October 5th to submit briefs explaining “whether, or to what extent” a proclamation that President Trump issued on Sunday renders the cases moot.

In the proclamation, which he tweeted out between attacks on football players and praise for Nascar, the President overrode his executive order keeping people from six mostly Muslim nations (Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria, Sudan, and Yemen), and all refugees, out of the country.

That executive order was itself a second try, after a first one that also included Iraq and applied even to green-card holders who had lived in America for years was hastily re-written. In this, the third iteration, there would be a ban on people from eight countries, including five of those six—Sudan got a pass this time—plus Chad, North Korea, and, in a limited way, Venezuela, whose government employees would be excluded. And, while the earlier order was framed as a temporary stop, this is an indefinite ban.

(Refugees would still be kept out under the terms of the executive order, although that would need to be renewed in a matter of weeks.) Trump’s lawyers have tried to argue that his previous executive orders had nothing to do with his campaign promise to institute a complete and total shutdown of Muslims entering the United States.

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The lawyers now appear to be hoping that, with the addition of Venezuela (which is mostly Christian) and North Korea (in thrall to a cult of personality), they can make that otherwise laughable assertion more credible. Trump has so many hatreds; the idea seems to be that, by consolidating them, you can disguise some of them.

The new order is supposedly based on an objective risk analysis: every country in the world was asked to meet certain standards for screening visa applicants, and, according to the Trump Administration, all but eight countries did.

These are not the same eight countries on the list, though. Iraq did not meet the standards, but the Administration decided that including it on the banned list was “not warranted.” This likely has to do with the same factors that got Iraq removed from the first order: political pressure and the dishonor attached to keeping out people who had worked for the American military in Iraq, often at considerable risk. Somalia, meanwhile, did meet the standards, but Trump decided to keep its people out, anyway.

The proclamation says that this is because Somalia is a haven for terrorists, but then many countries are. (Pakistan comes to mind.) Its inclusion may have something to do with the ugly rhetoric that Trump regularly directs at Somali refugees. Three days before the 2016 Presidential election, Trump appeared at a rally in Minneapolis, where many of those refugees have settled. He told the audience members that they could see “first hand” the problem with the “faulty vetting” of immigrants. “Everybody’s reading about the disaster taking place in Minnesota,” he said. “You don’t even have the right to talk about it!”

This idea—that even he, Trump, does not have a right to talk about what he really wants to do with respect to immigration—has been a running theme since before the election. In interviews and in tweets, he has either confidently said that he can make up some language to get around constitutional restraints on religious discrimination or else railed about how “political correctness” has kept him from being as tough as he’d like to be. He has suggested, in short, that his own lawyers and executive-order drafters are not being entirely frank about what he is doing and intends to do.

The Supreme Court has, historically, said that judges should generally defer to the President on questions of immigration and national security, unless they believe that there is “bad faith” involved. One of the questions that the Justices would have had to deal with in the oral arguments on the old executive order was how Trump’s gleeful mendacity tested that deference.

They still ought to ask that question, although the substitution of what can be seen as a third version of the ban undoubtedly complicates procedural matters. The now-on-hold oral arguments were expected to be a major showdown on questions of immigration, religious discrimination, and the limits of Presidential power.

Those questions, especially the last one, have not been resolved by the new order. Trump says that he has his reasons for excluding people from his list of eight countries, and that those reasons are not based in bigotry. But what about the next eight countries he adds? (He has said that he wants a much broader travel ban.) And the eight after that? Whom can Trump keep out, and how real do the fears he cites need to be?

There is another task that the Supreme Court might take on, if not in these cases then in one related to the proclamation—which is surely on the way.

During one of the oral arguments about the travel-ban case in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Judge Richard Paez asked the Trump Administration’s lawyer, Jeffrey Wall, about whether the arguments he was making could also have been made with regard to the internment of Americans of Japanese descent during the Second World War, which the Supreme Court, to its shame, upheld in Korematsu v. United States.

As the judge pointed out, the executive order at issue in Korematsu did not explicitly refer to Japanese-Americans, but it was used that way. Wall replied, “This case is not Korematsu, and if it were I would not be standing here, and the United States would not be defending it.” That wasn’t quite an answer—especially since Korematsu, as despised as it is, has never been formally overturned by the Supreme Court. Indeed, it is not that much of a stretch to imagine a second Trump Administration, or another future Administration like it, with a different lineup of Justices, citing Korematsu to justify the denial of rights to immigrants, or to any Americans. This country engaged in the mass detention of members of a minority group, without due process, in living memory. If the Supreme Court needs a vehicle to overturn Korematsu, it may be that it has found it in the Trump travel-ban cases. Until the Court does overturn that decision, the issue will never really be moot.
 



 





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