Why Trump Will Revise and Reissue Travel Ban

Tags: , , , , ,

By Brendan Kirby, LifeZette:

President shifts course on immigration action, DOJ withdraws request from appeals court.

President Donald Trump on Thursday said he plans to issue a revised order curtailing travel from terrorism-compromised countries, and the Justice Department asked an appellate court to hold off on consideration of the original directive.

Trump’s national security executive order has been on hold since a federal judge in Seattle granted a temporary restraining order earlier this month. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco last week upheld that decision.

At an impromptu news conference on Thursday, Trump criticized that decision but said he soon would unveil a new order.

“The new order is going to be very much tailored to what I consider to be a very bad decision,” he said. “But we can tailor the order to that decision and get just about everything and in some ways more.”

Trump took a shot at the appellate judges.

“That circuit is in chaos,” he said. “And that circuit, frankly, is in turmoil.”

Initially, the Justice Department had asked the full circuit to review the decision by the three-judge panel. But in a court filing Thursday, the Justice Department asked the court to hold off.

“Rather than continuing this litigation, the President intends in the near future to rescind the Order and replace it with a new, substantially revised Executive Order to eliminate what the panel erroneously thought were constitutional concerns,” the brief states. “In so doing, the President will clear the way for immediately protecting the country rather than pursuing further, potentially time-consuming litigation.”

The brief asks the court, after the president issues the new order, to vacate the three-judge panel’s ruling.

If the states of Washington and Minnesota — which challenged Trump — found the new order objectionable, they would have to file a new suit in district court.

The government’s brief does not spell out what a new executive order would contain. But it appears likely that, at the very least, it would explicitly exempt lawful permanent residents. The government argued Thursday that the 90-day pause in travel from the seven affected countries never was meant to include green card holders.

The brief stated that the appeals court judges erroneously believed the executive order applied to permanent residents, as well as foreigners who are already in the United States and are seeking asylum.

“It does not,” the brief states.

The main focus of the executive order, the government argues, “is on aliens who have never entered this country and have no connection to it.”

Kyle Shideler, director of threat information at the Washington-based Center for Security Policy, said the Trump administration appears most concerned with the ability to block refugees from countries like Syria, where millions of people have fled civil war and where the government is barely functioning and cannot assist U.S. authorities in screening people who want to be relocated to America.

“It’s clear that the Trump administration intends to act on this and continues to work on this until they find something that sticks,” he told LifeZette.

But Washington and Minnesota, which claimed the travel ban negatively impacted their businesses, public universities, and tax streams, continued to maintain that Trump’s order amounted to a Muslim ban.

“Trump reaffirmed this promise throughout his campaign,” Washington Solicitor General Noah Purcell wrote in a court filing Thursday. “Although Trump began referring to his plan in terms of ‘territories’ or ‘extreme vetting,’ he continued to make it clear that he intended to enact a Muslim ban.”

Purcell asked the court not to take the case and simply affirm the three-judge panel’s ruling upholding the trial court’s injunction. He called the panel’s ruling a “careful, thoughtful, and narrow opinion.”

Read additional content at LifeZette.

When ‘experts’ can’t agree on where things stand, how can average Americans figure it out?

‘Many American families see through the media’s bias and lies about you,’ says this husband and father

  • RSS WND

    • K.C. athlete kicks on the leftist outrage machine
      On May 11, Kansas City Chiefs placekicker Harrison Butker gave the commencement address at Benedictine College, a Catholic school in Kansas. Within 48 hours, the media elites were ablaze with outrage. There's a "growing uproar," warned NBC's Hoda Kotb. A Catholic speaker talked about Catholic issues to Catholic graduates. But the Butker critics who aren't… […]
    • Another big lie: Liberals are more 'caring' than conservatives
      People often ask, "How do you handle mean, vicious people when out in public?" The truth is I rarely encounter nastiness. It does happen, but thankfully, it is pretty rare. In general, when people don't like me, they possess the maturity to restrain themselves from verbal road rage. I conduct myself the same way when… […]
    • The Biden campaign: Dead in the water
      On Nov. 5, 2023, the New York Times published a story headlined, "Trump Leads in 5 Critical States as Voters Blast Biden, Times/Siena Poll Finds." Focusing on the states most likely to decide the 2024 election, the Times reported, "The results show Mr. Biden is losing to Mr. Trump, his likeliest Republican rival, by margins… […]
    • A fiction book about a killer vax
      In their weekly podcast, Hollywood veteran Loy Edge and longtime WND columnist Jack Cashill skirt the everyday politics downstream and travel merrily upstream to the source of our extraordinary culture. The post A fiction book about a killer vax appeared first on WND.
    • From the Pit to Power: An election drama in 2 acts
      Joe Biden's claim, speaking recently to Democrat donors, that Donald Trump intends to be a democracy-demolishing dictator, if elected, is shameless. "He's saying it out loud," Biden seethed. No, Joe, he didn't. The accusation stems from Trump's playful response to a Sean Hannity question during a December town hall meeting in Iowa. To anyone watching… […]
    • Too many laws, too little freedom
      We are caught in a vicious cycle of too many laws, too many cops, and too little freedom. It's hard to say whether we're dealing with a kleptocracy (a government ruled by thieves), a kakistocracy (a government run by unprincipled career politicians, corporations and thieves that panders to the worst vices in our nature and… […]
    • 50 NFL players are arrested annually – but the pro-family one gets attacked
      (THE BLAZE) -- Around 50 NFL players are arrested on average every year. Since 2000, the Kansas City Chiefs have supplied 41 of those arrests, tied for fourth in the league. NFL player arrests include 129 cases of domestic violence, 120 assault or battery cases, and even a handful of murder and homicide cases. The… […]
    • When living in mom's basement is a GOOD idea
      Dear Dave, I'm in college full-time right now, and my parents have been generous enough to pay for some of my school expenses. In addition, they let me live at home while I complete my degree. I work some nights and most weekends so I can go to school debt-free, but I'm trying to figure… […]
    • A chilling reality
      The post A chilling reality appeared first on WND.
    • The Democrats' journey
      The post The Democrats' journey appeared first on WND.
  • Enter My WorldView