The appeals court denied a request filed by the Trump administration to immediately restore the restriction on U.S. entry.
Fresh challenges to President Trumpโs court-frozen immigration order took shape Monday with two former secretaries of state claiming the White House was undermining national security and nearly 100 Silicon Valley tech companies arguing it will keep the best minds from coming to America.
The powerful new voices were added with another legal showdown coming as early as Monday. The suspension of the order, meanwhile, has allowed those previously banned more time to try to reach the United States.
โI canโt believe it. I am so happy,โ said Anab Ali moments after her nephew, Mustafa Aidid, walked through the arrivals gate at Dulles International Airport on Monday โ five days after the 22-year-old Somali was blocked from boarding a flight in Dubai despite a U.S. visa.
A decision Sunday by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit preserved a lower judgeโs order to temporarily halt the ban โ and based on a schedule the court outlined, the stop will remain in place at least until sometime on Monday. The Justice Department said it would not elevate the dispute to the Supreme Court before that.
Trump responded to the development Sunday by writing on Twitter that he had โinstructed Homeland Security to check people coming into our country VERY CAREFULLY.โ A Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman did not immediately return messages seeking comment on how, practically, that screening would be implemented.
Fresh challenges to President Trumpโs court-frozen immigration order took shape Monday with two former secretaries of state claiming the White House was undermining national security and nearly 100 Silicon Valley tech companies arguing it will keep the best minds from coming to America.
The powerful new voices were added with another legal showdown coming as early as Monday. The suspension of the order, meanwhile, has allowed those previously banned more time to try to reach the United States.
โI canโt believe it. I am so happy,โ said Anab Ali moments after her nephew, Mustafa Aidid, walked through the arrivals gate at Dulles International Airport on Monday โ five days after the 22-year-old Somali was blocked from boarding a flight in Dubai despite a U.S. visa.
A decision Sunday by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit preserved a lower judgeโs order to temporarily halt the ban โ and based on a schedule the court outlined, the stop will remain in place at least until sometime on Monday. The Justice Department said it would not elevate the dispute to the Supreme Court before that.
Trump responded to the development Sunday by writing on Twitter that he had โinstructed Homeland Security to check people coming into our country VERY CAREFULLY.โ A Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman did not immediately return messages seeking comment on how, practically, that screening would be implemented.
โJust cannot believe a judge would put our country in such peril,โ Trump wrote. โIf something happens blame him and court system. People pouring in. Bad!โ
Trump further came to the defense of his stalled order Monday. In a tweet, Trump dismissed as โfake newsโ various polls showing opposition to the executive order. โSorry,โ Trump wrote, โpeople want border security and extreme vetting.โ
The next few days will be telling for the future of the presidentโs executive order. The states of Washington and Minnesota, which are challenging the ban, asked the appeals court in the wee hours of Monday to keep the ban suspended, and Justice Department lawyers have until 6 p.m. to respond. The court will then schedule a hearing or rule whether the ban should remain on hold.
Early Monday, two former secretaries of state โ John F. Kerry and Madeline Albright โ joined a six-page joint statement saying Trumpโs order โunderminesโ national security and will โendanger U.S. troops in the field.โ The rare declaration, addressed to the 9th Circuit, was also backed by top former national security officials including Leon Panetta, who served as a past CIA director and defense secretary during the Obama administration.
Hours earlier, a host of technology giants โ including Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Netflix, Twitter, Uber โ were part of a โfriend of the courtโ legal brief by 97 companies opposing the Trump administrationโs immigration order.
The brief claimed the order was a โsignificant departureโ from U.S. immigration policies and โmakes it more difficult and expensive for U.S. companies to recruit, hire, and retain some of the worldโs best employees.
In the meantime, people who had been stranded in legal limbo rushed to fly back to the United States. Some successfully reunited with family members, while others โ particularly those whose visas were physically taken or marked as invalid โ ran into roadblocks trying to board planes overseas.
At Dulles on Sunday, immigration lawyers could be heard on phones, arguing with airline representatives to let their passengers board as some seemed confused over the various court rulings and what they meant.
On Monday, the Somali traveler Aidid was elated once he heard the entry stamp hitting his passport. Aidid, who lives in the United Arab Emirates, had a temporary visa so he and his childhood sweetheart could get married in the United States.
โI didnโt know what to do. We had waited so long,โ he said, referring to the two-year process for the visa.
He said he did not sleep the entire 15-hour flight from Dubai. From Dulles, Aidid headed to his auntโs home in Asburn to get some rest.
What lies ahead is likely to be a weeks-long battle that will be waged in courtrooms across the country over whether Trumpโs ban can pass legal muster. Federal courts in New York, California and elsewhere have blocked aspects of the ban from being implemented, although one federal judge in Massachusetts said he did not think that challengers had demonstrated that they had a high likelihood of success. The lawsuits now stretch from D.C. to Hawaii, and the number seems to grow regularly.
The Trump administration has been steadfast in its support of the executive order, which it says is necessary for national security, and the president himself tweeted repeatedly his disdain for the judge in Washington state who put a stop to it.
โThe opinion of this so-called judge, which essentially takes law-enforcement away from our country, is ridiculous and will be overturned!โ Trump wrote Saturday.
[Trump lashes out at โso-called judgeโ who temporarily blocked entry ban]
Vice President Pence said Sunday on NBCโs โMeet The Pressโ that White House officials felt that Trump was โoperating within his authority as president, both under the Constitution and under clear statutory law.โ Legal analysts have said the president has broad authority to set immigration policy, although civil liberties advocates have countered that the order essentially amounts to a discriminatory ban on Muslims that has no real national security purpose.
โWeโre very confident that weโre going to prevail,โ Pence said. โWeโll accomplish the stay and will win the case on the merits. But again, the focus here is on the safety and security of the American people.โ
On Sunday morning television talk shows, some Republicans in Congress took issue with comments by the president, particularly his description of U.S. District Judge James L. Robart as a โso-called judge.โ
โIโll be honest, I donโt understand language like that,โ Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) said. โWe donโt have so-called judges, we donโt have so-called senators, we donโt have so-called presidents. We have people from three different branches of government who take an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution. .โ.โ. So, we donโt have any so-called judges, we have real judges.โ
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said: โWe all get disappointed from time to time at the outcome in courts on things that we care about. But I think it is best to avoid criticizing judges individually.โ
McConnell went on to offer a broader critique of Trumpโs executive order than he had previously: โWe all want to try to keep terrorists out of the United States. But we canโt shut down travel. We certainly donโt want Muslim allies who have fought with us in countries overseas to not be able to travel to the United States. We need to be careful about this.โ
Several federal judges have ruled against the administration on its implementation of the ban, though the case now before the San Francisco-based 9th Circuit is perhaps the most significant one. It stems from a lawsuit brought by the states of Washington and Minnesota, which alleged that the immigration order was โseparating families, harming thousands of the Statesโ residents, damaging the Statesโ economies, hurting State-based companies, and undermining both Statesโ sovereign interest in remaining a welcoming place for immigrants and refugees.โ
Responding to those arguments, Robart temporarily halted the ban on Friday. Then, 9th Circuit Judges William C. Canby Jr., who was appointed by President Jimmy Carter, and Michelle Taryn Friedland, who was appointed by President Barack Obama, denied the Justice Departmentโs request on Sunday to immediately restore it.
[Travelers from Iran board flights to the United States following stay, attorney says]
The Justice Department could have gone straight to the Supreme Court, but a Justice Department spokesman said it would not do so.
โWith the fast briefing schedule the appeals court laid out, we do not plan to ask the Supreme Court for an immediate stay but instead let the appeals process play out,โ spokesman Peter Carr said.
Although the side that loses can request intervention from the nationโs highest judicial body, it would take the votes of five justices to overturn the panelโs decision. The court has been shorthanded since the death of Justice Antonin Scalia nearly a year ago, and it is ideologically divided between four more liberal justices and four conservative-leaning ones.
Leon Fresco, deputy assistant attorney general for the Office of Immigration Litigation in Obamaโs Justice Department, said he was โsurprised that there is this exuberance to immediately rescind the executive order,โ particularly given the timing issues.
Trumpโs order, which barred all refugees as well as citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries from traveling to the United States, was temporary. Refugees were banned for 120 days. The others were barred for 90 days, except those from Syria, whose travel to the United States was blocked indefinitely. The order was purportedly designed to give the administration time to formulate a plan on how to vet people coming from countries that have terrorist activity.
โIt is perplexing why the government wouldnโt want to simply, at this point, maintain an orderly process in one court as opposed to fighting it out all across the country in different courts, and working its way to the Supreme Court,โ Fresco said. โUnless the goal is to have an outright travel ban forever, and we should take the president at his word that thatโs not the goal, then letโs just have calmer heads prevail and conduct the security analysis that was going to be conducted during these 90 days.โ
Indeed, if Trumpโs ban were to be immediately reinstated, that might spark chaos similar to what occurred when it was first rolled out on Jan. 27. To implement the order then, the State Department provisionally revoked tens of thousands of visas. When people began landing at U.S. airports, Customs and Border Protection officers detained more than 100 people and deported some, sparking protests and lawsuits across the country.
It was unclear Sunday whether U.S. officials had a plan in place to avoid a repeat of that scenario, though much would depend on what specifically was ordered by a court, and when. Spokesmen for the State Department and Customs and Border Protection declined to comment on the question.
In an interview with Bill OโReilly of Fox News that aired Sunday afternoon, Trump insisted that the initial implementation of his order was โvery smoothโ and said โ misleadingly โ that โyou had 109 people out of hundreds of thousands of travelers, and all we did was vet those people very, very carefully.โ That does not take into account the tens of thousands of people who could not travel because their visa was revoked; nor does it acknowledge those who were taken out of the country after their plane landed.
The Department of Homeland Security said Saturday that because of Robartโs ruling, it was suspending enforcement of the executive order entirely, and the State Department restored the visas that had been provisionally revoked. Advocates encouraged travelers from the affected countries who qualified for entry to get on planes as soon as possible because of the unpredictable legal terrain.
Early Sunday, the Justice Department asked the appeals court to intervene, asserting that it was improper for a lower court to engage in โsecond-guessingโ of the presidentโs judgment on a national security matter.
โThe injunction contravenes the constitutional separation of powers; harms the public by thwarting enforcement of an Executive Order issued by the nationโs elected representative responsible for immigration matters and foreign affairs; and ยญsecond-guesses the Presidentโs national security judgment about the quantum of risk posed by the admission of certain classes of aliens and the best means of minimizing that risk,โ acting solicitor general Noel Francisco wrote in a brief.
It is somewhat unusual for a district judge to issue an order that affects the entire country, but Robart, who was nominated by President George W. Bush and has been on the bench since 2004, said it was necessary to follow Congressโs intention that โthe immigration laws of the United States should be enforced vigorously and uniformly.โ
He was quoting from a 2015 appeals court ruling that had blocked Obamaโs executive action that would have made it easier for undocumented immigrants to remain in the United States. It was never implemented because of legal challenges.