President Trump To Replace Halted Travel Ban With New Executive Order
President Donald Trump is planning to issue a new executive order related to his earlier action barring entry into the U.S. to citizens from seven predominantly Muslim countries, according to court documents filed Thursday by U.S. Department of Justice and Trump’s comments at a press briefing.
Trump’s previous order was halted by a federal court judge in Washington state
who issued a nationwide temporary restraining order on February 3. The
Trump administration quickly appealed the case to the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in San Francisco but that court's three-judge panel
handed down a unanimous decision that left the restraining order in
place.
Trump tweeted a fiery response to that ruling, promising to pursue the matter in court, but in Thursday’s filing, the Justice Department informed the 9th Circuit that it is not seeking a reconsideration on the matter.
“Rather
than continuing this litigation, 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,” explains the filing from the Justice
Department.
Trump considers 'brand new' executive order after court setback
Shortly
before the new court filing, Trump defended the legality of the
executive order at a White House news conference, stating that his
administration is “appealing” the original result, but also confirming
that he would be moving ahead with a new action that will be “tailored”
to the court’s earlier decision and issued “sometime next week.”
“We
are going further -- we're issuing a new executive action next week
that will comprehensively protect our country,” said Trump. “So we'll be
going along the one path and hopefully winning that.”
“The
government respectfully submits that the most appropriate course would
be for the Court to hold its consideration of the case until the
President issues the new Order and then vacate the panel’s preliminary decision,” the Justice Department writes.
In its original form, the executive order put a 90-day stop on entry to the United States for nationals of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia,
Sudan, Syria and Yemen. Confusion ensued in the aftermath of the
order’s signing as legal permanent residents of the U.S. and some visa
holders from the affected countries were denied admission at various
airports.
The Justice Department does concede though that the order was “ambiguous” with respect to legal permanent residents which led to conflicting “reasonable” interpretations.
Additional clarification in Thursday’s filing explains that the order was only meant to apply to aliens attempting to enter the country, not persons already in the U.S. who haven’t left.
Trump
maintained Thursday that the roll-out of the order “was perfect,”
adding that the only problem they encountered was with “a bad court.”
“We had a court, what I consider to be, with great respect, a very bad
decision, very bad for the safety and security of our country,” said
Trump.
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