6/26/2017 - Matt Vespa Townhall.com
It’s been a
long legal road, but the Trump administration will be able to enforce most of
its executive order on immigration that included a travel moratorium on six
predominantly Muslim countries: Sudan, Libya, Somalia, Syria, Iran, and Yemen.
These nations are either embroiled in civil war, failed states, or state
sponsors of terror. Second, it’s not a Muslim ban; people from Indonesia—the
world’s most populous Muslim country—can still come here. Nevertheless,
liberals thought the order was unconstitutional based on religious
discrimination. They were able to get injunctions against the first order from
Washington State’s Attorney General Bob Ferguson. It was granted.
The second
revised version, which cleared up the legal haze over green card holders, was
also targeted by liberals, with New York, Minnesota, Washington, and
Oregon filing
motions to block its enforcement. Hawaii was able to block
the order, which then turned into
a preliminary injunction. Recently, the state rolled back
portions of the injunction relating to impact studies on anti-terror
initiatives, according to
Politico. The Trump White House filed multiple
appeals, with the Fourth and
Ninth Circuit rejecting arguments to reinstate the so-called ban. For the Ninth
Circuit, they rejected the appeal
twice.
In May,
Attorney General Jeff Sessions said they would request the Supreme Court settle
this matter.
Today, as Christine wrote, they
did—overturning the injunction on the order, agreeing to hear arguments on the
ban, and allowing partial enforcement in the interim. In short, a person from
the list of nations in the executive order who doesn’t have a “bona fide”
relationship with someone in the United States is going to be denied entry.
The
Department of Homeland Security offered thanks to the high court for allowing
them to enforce
the law and protect national security:
The Supreme Court today has allowed the
Department of Homeland Security to largely implement the President's Executive
Order and take rational and necessary steps to protect our nation from persons
looking to enter and potentially do harm. The granting of a partial stay of the
circuit injunctions with regard to many aliens abroad restores to the Executive
Branch crucial and long-held constitutional authority to defend our national
borders.
The Department will provide additional details on implementation after consultation with the Departments of Justice and State. The implementation of the Executive Order will be done professionally, with clear and sufficient public notice, particularly to potentially affected travelers, and in coordination with partners in the travel industry.
The Department will provide additional details on implementation after consultation with the Departments of Justice and State. The implementation of the Executive Order will be done professionally, with clear and sufficient public notice, particularly to potentially affected travelers, and in coordination with partners in the travel industry.
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