President Trump has signed a new travel ban. Travelers from
12 countries will be barred from entering the US, and people from an additional
seven countries will face partial travel restrictions, reported NPR.
The proclamation goes into effect June 9 — and fulfills something Trump has
long-promised: to bring back the travel ban from his first term.
But that ban was the subject of many legal challenges. Some legal scholars say
President Trump has learned a lot since then.
In Trump v. Hawaii, a 5-4 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court gave broad leeway to presidential authority. The Supreme Court upheld President Trump's travel ban that barred nearly all travelers from five mainly Muslim countries as well as North Korea and Venezuela.
The president's proclamation was "squarely within the
scope of Presidential authority under the INA," the court wrote in its
majority opinion, referring to the Immigration and Nationality Act.
The court acceded broadly to presidential power. The
majority opinion, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, noted that the INA
exudes deference to the president. The executive order, he wrote, was more
detailed than similar orders by Presidents Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter.
Roberts then deferred to the president's power. The only
thing a president has to signal is that entry for people from various countries
would be detrimental to the interest of the United States. The president
undoubtedly fulfilled that requirement here, the court noted.
The president, Roberts said, has extraordinary power to
express his opinions to the country, as well. The plaintiffs argued that
Trump's past campaign and other statements about Muslims should be taken into
account, but the majority said it is not the court's role to do that.
The upshot of the court's precedents is clear, he said. The court should not inhibit the president's flexibility in responding to changing world conditions, and any court inquiry into matters of into national security is highly constrained. As long as the president presents an explanation for the travel ban that is "plausibly related" to a legitimate national security objective, Roberts said, he is on firm constitutional ground.
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