Justices to hear challenge to travel ban

Hawaii’s claim linking anti-Muslim bias to Trump’s proclamation disputed

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court announced Friday that it would consider a challenge to President Donald Trump's latest effort to limit travel from countries that are said to pose a threat to the nation's security.

The case concerns Trump's third bid to make good on a campaign promise to secure the nation's borders. But challengers to the latest ban, issued as a presidential proclamation in September, said it was tainted by religious animus and not adequately justified by national security concerns.

The decision to hear the case, Trump v. Hawaii, No. 17-965, came almost a year after the first travel ban, issued a week after Trump took office and targeting seven majority-Muslim countries, caused chaos at the nation's airports and was promptly blocked by courts around the nation. A second version of the ban, issued in March, fared little better, though the Supreme Court allowed part of it to go into effect in June when it agreed to hear the Trump administration's appeals in two cases.

But the Supreme Court dismissed those appeals in October after the second ban expired. There is no reason to think the latest appeal will founder on an expiration date, because Trump's September order -- unlike the earlier ones -- is meant to last indefinitely. The justices are likely to hear arguments in the latest case in April and to issue a decision in late June.

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The latest ban restricts travel from eight nations, six of them predominantly Muslim. For now, most citizens of Chad, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Syria and Yemen will be barred from entering the United States, along with some groups of people from Venezuela.

The restrictions vary in their details, but for the most part, citizens of the countries are forbidden from immigrating to the United States, and many of them are barred from working, studying or vacationing here.

In a brief urging the Supreme Court to hear the case, Solicitor General Noel Francisco wrote that the eight countries named in the current ban "do not share adequate information with the United States to assess the risks their nationals pose, or they present other heightened risk factors."

But Hawaii contended that the current ban is worse than the previous, because it is permanent unless the administration takes some action to amend it.

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"The president has issued a proclamation, without precedent in this nation's history, that purports to ban over 150 million aliens from this country based on nationality alone," said Hawaii's brief to the court, written by Washington lawyer Neal Katyal.

"The immigration laws do not grant the president this power: Congress has delegated him only a measure of its authority to exclude harmful aliens or respond to exigencies, and it has expressly prohibited discrimination based on nationality."

In December, in a sign that the Supreme Court may be more receptive to upholding the September order, the court allowed it to go into effect as the case moved forward. The move effectively overturned a compromise in place since June, when the court said travelers with connections to the United States could continue to travel here notwithstanding restrictions in an earlier version of the ban.

Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor dissented from the December ruling.

The state of Hawaii, several individuals and a Muslim group challenged the latest ban's limits on travel from six predominantly Muslim nations; they did not object to the portions concerning North Korea and Venezuela. They prevailed before a U.S. District Court in Hawaii and before a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.

The appeals court ruled that Trump had exceeded the authority Congress had given him over immigration and had violated a part of the immigration laws barring discrimination in the issuance of visas.

In his brief, Francisco wrote that the president has vast constitutional and statutory authority over immigration. He added that the third order had been the result of "an extensive, worldwide review by multiple government agencies."

"The courts below," Francisco wrote, "have overridden the president's judgments on sensitive matters of national security and foreign relations, and severely restricted the ability of this and future presidents to protect the nation."

The appeals court based its ruling on immigration statutes, not the Constitution's prohibition of religious discrimination. But both sides urged the Supreme Court to consider both the statutory and constitutional questions if it agreed to hear the case.

Lawyers for the challengers told the justices that Trump's own statements provided powerful evidence of anti-Muslim animus. The latest order, they said, was infected by the same flaws as the previous one.

"The president has repeatedly explained that the two orders pursue the same aim," Hawaii's brief read. Nine days before the September order was released, Katyal wrote, "the president demanded a 'larger, tougher and more specific' ban, reminding the public that he remains committed to a 'travel ban' even if it is not 'politically correct.'"

On the day the September order became public, Katyal added, "the president made clear that it was the harsher version of the travel ban, telling reporters, 'The travel ban: the tougher, the better.'"

Francisco said discrimination had played no role in the September order.

"The proclamation's process and substance confirm that its purpose was to achieve national-security and foreign-policy goals, not to impose anti-Muslim bias," Francisco wrote.

The Supreme Court, back at full strength after Trump's appointment of Justice Neil Gorsuch to replace Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in 2016, already had an unusually large number of significant cases on its docket, including ones on voting rights, union power, digital privacy and a clash between claims of religious freedom and gay rights.

Information for this article was contributed by Adam Liptak of The New York Times; by Mark Sherman of The Associated Press; and by Robert Barnes of The Washington Post.

A Section on 01/20/2018

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