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Trump says he will issue a new order after a ‘very bad decision’ blocked his initial travel ban

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Faced with a string of legal defeats across the country, President Trump on Thursday effectively abandoned efforts to uphold his controversial ban on travel from several countries with links to terrorism and said he would issue a new order next week crafted to withstand constitutional challenges.

Only a week after Trump said “see you in court” to opponents of the ban, administration lawyers signaled Thursday they would not pursue an appeal of a federal court ruling blocking enforcement of the ban, which Trump said would be replaced with a new order “tailored” to overcome the court’s legal reservations.

“As far as the new order, the new order is going to be very much tailored to what I consider to be a very bad decision,” Trump said of the appeals court ruling that blocked enforcement of the Jan. 27 executive order halting most travel from seven predominantly Muslim countries, as well as new refugee resettlement.

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The ban prevented citizens of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen from entering the U.S. for 90 days, blocked refugees for 120 days, indefinitely suspended admittance of Syrian refugees and gave preference for refugees who were members of religious minorities that are persecuted in their home countries.

Legal analysts and some of those who challenged the ban called Trump’s decision a major concession of defeat.

Trump did not specify what would be in the new executive order. To survive future court challenges, it probably would have to exclude those who have been living in the country with green cards and visas and focus on those who have never been to the U.S. and might have some link to terrorism, experts said.

White House officials already have indicated that a new order would most likely be designed to have no impact on current holders of U.S. visas, meaning that people with green cards or student or work-related visas would be able to travel without additional restrictions.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously decided on Feb. 9 to uphold a nationwide block on enforcement of the ban after concluding it was likely to violate the Constitution — a decision Trump denounced as “very bad.”

Trump downplayed the chaos that erupted at airports around the world after the ban, as workers, students, people trying to visit families in the U.S. and others with valid visas were denied permission to board planes or turned away after arriving in the U.S.

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State Department officials said an estimated 60,000 visas were canceled, but Trump blamed much of the turmoil at U.S. airports on a Delta Airlines computer outage, which occurred after people were already detained at airports and while protests were underway.

“Let me tell you about the travel ban. We had a very smooth rollout of the travel ban. But we had a bad court. Got a bad decision,” he said. “The rollout was perfect.”

Given the plans for the new executive order, Trump administration officials said they would not pursue an appeal of the 9th Circuit’s hold on the current ban.

“Rather than continuing this litigation,” the administration said in written arguments, “the president intends in the near future to rescind the order and replace it with a new, substantially revised executive order to eliminate what the panel erroneously thought were constitutional concerns.”

The 9th Circuit’s active judges had been expected to vote on whether to reconsider last week’s decision to continue blocking the ban after the close of briefing Thursday. Legal analysts anticipated that a majority of the court’s judges would vote against reconsideration. But in light of the upcoming new executive order, the court said late Thursday that it would pause its proceedings “pending further order of this court.”

The three-judge panel, which consisted of two Democratic appointees and one appointed by a Republican, had refused to lift the nationwide hold on the ban, issued in a case brought by the states of Washington and Minnesota.

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The panel said the ban was likely to violate the due process clause of the 5th Amendment because it restricted travel without notice or a hearing.

On Monday, a federal judge in Virginia halted enforcement of the ban in that state based on evidence the order was motivated by animus to Muslims in violation of the Constitution’s establishment clause.

The rulings came amid dozens of court challenges against the administration around the nation since the travel restrictions went into effect. Trump has suffered initial loses in many of them.

Washington state Atty. Gen. Bob Ferguson, whose office wrote legal arguments against the ban, said Thursday on Twitter that the president was “conceding defeat.”

Ferguson, in an interview earlier this week on ABC, also said the state would consider fighting any new executive order.

“We’ll fight if whatever they come up with violates the Constitution and is unlawful, which the current executive order most certainly is,” Ferguson said.

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UC Berkeley law professor John Yoo, who served in the George W. Bush administration, said a new order could avoid raising concerns of religious bias by focusing on potentially problematic individuals rather than on predominantly Muslim nations.

Yoo said Trump could order additional security checks for people whom intelligence agents and law enforcement officials believe are potential threats.

A new order that excluded green card holders and people with visas who already have been to the United States also would be difficult to challenge legally, Yoo said.

“Then the only people harmed by the order would be outside the U.S., and the Supreme Court has said people outside the country don’t have constitutional rights,” said Yoo, who helped write a memo justifying torture for terrorism suspects when he was working in the Bush administration.

“The class of people who would be harmed are not the people who have legal rights to sue,” he said.

Pepperdine University law professor Douglas Kmiec called the decision to issue a new directive “an admission that the first order was drafted with less than ample care.”

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For a new order to survive court challenges, Kmiec said, the administration would have to exclude foreign nationals who are already living and working in the country.

“And they would be wise to delete an attempt to give a Christian preference” for refugees, he said.

The decision to craft a new order was a “lesson” that executive power is “is not a blank check,” Kmiec added. Trump “doesn’t get to do what he wants,” he said, without court scrutiny.

In addition to its 9th Circuit filing Thursday, the Trump administration asked a federal district court in Washington, D.C., to suspend deadlines for arguments in another case challenging the ban pending a new executive order.

In response, the court ordered the Department of Justice to give an update on “whether a new executive order has been issued or is forthcoming” by 5 p.m. Wednesday.

Margo Schlanger, a law professor at the University of Michigan, said Trump’s best chance at surviving court challenges against a new order would be to make it apply to fewer people.

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Still, she said, even a narrowed order would likely still be vulnerable to court challenges.

“Evidence of anti-Muslim bias will not be so easy to wipe away,” said Schlanger, who was the head of civil rights for the Department of Homeland Security under President Obama.

Some critics of the order said they could not imagine how Trump could accomplish his objectives legally.

“We’re skeptical that any rewriting of the order will address the basic human rights issues it raises, given Trump’s repeated assertions of discriminating against Muslims,” said Robyn Shepherd, a spokeswoman for Amnesty International USA.

The 9th Circuit had been scheduled to consider a rehearing of its ruling last week after an unidentified judge on the appeals court asked to have the ruling reviewed by an 11-member panel — an action that generally occurs when a member of the court disagrees with a decision and wants a speedy appeal.

Washington state and Minnesota contended the travel ban was hurting business and disrupting public universities and argued that it violated constitutional guarantees of due process and religious freedom.

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maura.dolan@latimes.com

jaweed.kaleem@latimes.com


UPDATES:

5:55 p.m.: This article was updated with the 9th Circuit Court’s decision to stay further proceedings in the travel ban case, and with a court order in Washington, D.C., directing the Justice Department to report by Wednesday on whether it has issued a new executive order.

4:45 p.m.: This article was updated throughout with additional analysis.

1:50 p.m.: This article was updated with reaction to President Trump’s announcement.

This article was originally published at 1:05 p.m.

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