Republican lawmakers largely endorsed President Trump’s revised immigration executive order on …
GOP lawmakers get behind Trump immigration order reboot amid new legal threats
Now Playing Trump administration officials announce revised travel ban
Republican lawmakers largely endorsed President
Trump’s revised immigration executive order on Monday and suggested it
addressed concerns they had about the original measure, even as a
coalition of Democratic attorneys general and civil rights groups
prepared for a new round of legal action.
House Speaker Paul Ryan, who had voiced reservations
about the original travel ban rollout, said the new version advances
“our shared goal” of protecting the United States.
Another Republican critical of the original version,
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, said he believes the revised order
will “pass legal muster.”
“I congratulate the administration for modifying the
original order to ensure that it is prospective in application,
protective of those with valid visas and legal status, and exempts
Iraqis, as five thousand Americans are currently fighting alongside them
against ISIL,” Graham said in a statement.
Trump’s revised executive order, signed Monday,
suspends the refugee program and entry to the U.S. for travelers from
six mostly Muslim countries, curtailing what was a broadly worded
directive in a bid to withstand court scrutiny.
As before, the order will suspend refugee entries for
120 days. But it no longer will suspend Syrian refugee admissions
indefinitely.
The new order also will ban travelers from six
countries who did not obtain a visa before Jan. 27 from entering the
United States for 90 days. The directive no longer includes Iraq, as the
original order did, but covers travelers from Iran, Libya, Somalia,
Sudan, Syria and Yemen.
Iraq, a key U.S. ally in the fight against terror
group ISIS, was removed from the travel ban list after Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson said he spoke with the Iraqi government about its
vetting process and felt that the screening system was thorough enough
to stand on its own.
As Republican lawmakers threw their political weight
behind the revised version, Democratic officials in Washington, Virginia
and Massachusetts said they were considering their next legal steps.
Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson, who took
the Trump administration to court over the constitutionality of the
original order, said Monday he still has legal concerns about the
updated language.
At a news conference, he said he and his office will review the policy and will decide on a course of action later this week.
“I do not take lightly suing the president of the United States,” he said.
Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey said
she’s also considering legal options in response to the reworked travel
ban. Healy called the newest language misguided and said it is “a clear
attempt to resurrect a discredited order and fulfill a discriminatory
and unconstitutional campaign promise.”
Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring, who also led a
legal challenge to Trump’s first ban, said the new directive still
“sends a horrible message to the world.”
"Our goal has always been to protect the commonwealth
of Virginia and our residents who were harmed by President Trump's
ill-conceived, poorly-implemented, and un-American ban, particularly
green card holders and those at our businesses and colleges with valid
work and student visas,” he said. “It is significant that after we won
the nation's first preliminary injunction against the ban, President
Trump has now revoked his original order and apparently exempted all
those persons from his revised order."
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel calling the revision a betrayal of the country’s core values.
“The legal grounds of the first travel ban were
questionable at best, and today’s iteration is nothing more than a wolf
in sheep’s clothing – different packaging intended to achieve the same
result,” Emanuel said in a statement, adding that the order would “slam
the door” on refugees fleeing war-torn countries.
Unlike the first rocky rollout of the executive
order, Trump privately signed the new directive while Tillerson,
Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Homeland Security Secretary John
Kelly formally unveiled it. The Trump-free event was in contrast to the
first version of the order that the president signed in a high-profile
ceremony at the Pentagon’s Hall of Heroes.
Tillerson defended the new order on Monday, saying
Trump is using “his rightful authority” to keep people safe with the new
directive.
“This order is part of our ongoing efforts to
eliminate vulnerabilities that radical Islamic terrorists can and will
exploit,” he added.
Kelly said the new executive order “will make America more secure.”
“Unvetted travel isn’t a privilege especially when national security is at stake,” he said.
Among other things, the revised order also makes clear that green card holders are not affected.
“If you have travel documents, if you actually have a
visa, if you are a legal permanent resident, you are not covered under
this particular executive action,” White House Counselor Kellyanne
Conway told Fox News on Monday. “I think people will see six or seven
major points about this executive order that do clarify who is
covered.”
The Trump administration also plans to cap the number
of refugees it accepts to 50,000 a year – down sharply from the 110,000
accepted by the Obama administration.
According to the new executive order, the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security will have 20 days to perform a “global,
country-by-country review of the identity and security information that
each country provides to the U.S. government to support U.S. visa and
other immigration benefit determinations.”
Countries will then have 50 days to comply with
requests to update or improve the “quality” of the information they
provide to U.S. officials.
For countries that don’t comply, the State
Department, DHS and intelligence agencies can make additional
recommendations on what, if any, restrictions should be imposed.
The new order also details categories of people eligible to enter the United States for business or medical travel purposes.
Almost immediately, there was pushback from Democratic lawmakers and human rights groups.
“A watered down ban is still a ban,” Sen. Charles
Schumer, D-N.Y., said. “Despite the administration’s changes, this
dangerous executive order makes us less safe, not more, it is
mean-spirited, and un-American. It must be repealed.”
Omar Jadwat, director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project, agreed.
“President Trump has recommitted himself to religious
discrimination, and he can expect continued disapproval from both the
courts and the people,” he said in a statement.
More than two dozen lawsuits were filed in response
to the original travel ban. The suit filed in Washington state succeeded
in having the order suspended by arguing that it violated
constitutional protections against religious discrimination.
The White House was criticized the first time around
for its rocky rollout of the travel ban. Trump has expressed frustration
both in person and on social media over the stalled ban, at times
targeting the courts and federal judges who he claimed put the country
at risk by holding up the order.
Last week, Trump told reporters at the White House
that “the new order is going to be very much tailored to what I consider
to be a very bad decision.”
Despite widespread belief the first order was done in
haste, Trump and other White House officials have repeatedly called it a
success.
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