Hawaii and Maryland
on Wednesday could decide the immediate fate of President Donald Trump’s
revised travel ban. The ban is set to take effect at 12.01 a.m. EDT (0401 GMT)
on Thursday.The courts have been asked in lawsuits challenging the ban to issue restraining orders that would prevent it from taking effect pending resolution of the litigation. The new order, which temporarily bars the entry of most refugees as well as travelers from six Muslim-majority countries, was signed by the president on March 6, with a 10-day lag before it took effect. It replaced an earlier, broader order that was signed amid much fanfare a week after Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration. The first order temporarily banned travelers from seven countries in addition to most refugees and took effect immediately, causing chaos and protests at airports across the country and around the globe. States and civil rights groups filed more than two dozen lawsuits against the first order, arguing it discriminated against Muslims and violated the U.S.
Constitution. In response to a
lawsuit by Washington state, a federal judge in Seattle last month issued a
nationwide halt to the first order. That decision was upheld by a U.S. appeals
court. The Trump administration made changes in an attempt to address the
judges’ concerns. The states and civil rights groups went back to court arguing
the new ban did not solve the problems and should be stopped. One central
question likely to be raised at the hearings is who would be harmed by the new
ban.
The administration in its new order
explicitly exempts legal permanent residents and existing visa holders and
provides a series of waivers for various categories of immigrants with ties to
the United States. While the new order still bars citizens of Iran, Libya,
Syria, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen from entering the country for 90 days, Iraq is
no longer on the list. Refugees are still barred for 120 days, but an
indefinite ban on all refugees from Syria was deleted. To succeed, the
plaintiffs must show they have “standing” to challenge the ban, which means
they must have been harmed by the policy. If they get past that hurdle, the
plaintiffs will argue that both the new ban and the old discriminate on the
basis of religion and are unconstitutional.
The Trump administration disputes
that allegation, citing as evidence that many Muslim-majority countries are not
included in the ban. In the Hawaii case, the island state says its universities
and tourist economy would be harmed by the restrictions on travel. Hawaii also
sued in conjunction with a plaintiff named Ismail Elshikh, an American citizen
from Egypt who is an imam at the Muslim Association of Hawaii. Elshikh says his
family will be harmed if his mother-in-law, who lives in Syria, is prevented
from visiting because of the restrictions. The government in its response to
Hawaii said Elshikh had not been harmed because the ban allows for waivers, and
his mother-in-law could apply for one.
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