The chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Migration welcomed a
federal appeals court ruling that upheld a temporary restraining order
against President Donald Trump’s travel ban on refugees from seven
predominantly Muslim countries that also temporarily suspended the
country’s refugee resettlement program.
“We respect the rule of law and the American judicial process. We
remain steadfast in our commitment to resettling refugees and all those
fleeing persecution,” Bishop Joe S. Vasquez of Austin, Texas, said in a
statement Feb. 10.
“At this time we remain particularly dedicated to ensuring that
affected refugee and immigrant families are not separated and that they
continue to be welcomed in our country,” the statement said.
The bishop pledged that church agencies would continue to welcome
people “as it is a vital part of our Catholic faith and an enduring
element of our American values and traditions.”
In a decision issued late Feb. 9, a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously rejected the government’s argument
to lift the freeze on the president’s order and maintained that the
court had jurisdiction in the case as a check on executive power.
Trump had argued that his order was a matter of national security and that the courts had no claim to decide the issue.
The panel ruled otherwise saying that such an argument “runs contrary
to the fundamental structure of our constitutional democracy.”
Further, the judges said, “although courts owe considerable deference
to the president’s policy determinations with respect to immigration
and national security, it is beyond question that the federal judiciary
retains the authority to adjudicate constitutional challenges to
executive action.”
The administration is expected to file an appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court.
Trump said in a posting on Twitter minutes after the ruling was
released: “SEE YOU IN COURT, THE SECURITY OF OUR NATION IS AT STAKE!”
He later told reporters that the judges had made “a political decision.”
The case was filed by the state of Washington, which argued that
Trump’s order was unconstitutional because it discriminated against
Muslims and that state agencies were harmed because students and
employees were barred from re-entering the country. The state of
Minnesota subsequently joined the lawsuit.
U.S. District Court Judge James Robart of Seattle halted Trump’s travel ban Feb. 3 by granting a temporary restraining order.
Several lawsuits have been filed challenging Trump’s Jan. 27
executive order that suspended the entire U.S. refugee resettlement
program for 120 days and banned entry of all citizens from seven
majority-Muslim countries — Syria, Iraq, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Yemen and
Somalia — for 90 days.
Another clause in the order established religious criteria for
refugees, proposing to give priority to religious minorities over others
who may have equally compelling refugee claims.
In its 29-page ruling, the appeals court said the administration’s
lawyers had provided no evidence that refugees from the seven countries
named in the ban posed a national security threat through terrorism.
The judges also wrote that the government had not shown Trump’s order
provides any avenue for those restricted from traveling to the U.S. to
appeal the decision or seek a hearing to present their reasons for
entering the country.
The decision said that earlier court cases had
determined that the protections established under the due process clause
in the Constitution’s Fifth Amendment “apply to all ‘persons'” within
the U.S. including aliens whose presence is “lawful, unlawful, temporary
or permanent” as well as to people attempting to reenter the U.S. after
traveling.
The court also considered the public’s interest in the case and
determined that the public “has an interest in the free flow of travel,
in avoiding separation of families and in freedom from discrimination.”