Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Virginia Federal Judge Issues Strong Rebuke of Trump Travel Ban

AG Mark Herring in 2013 at our home - yes, there will be a 2017 fundraiser
Lost in all of the turmoil surrounding the resignation of Der Trumpenführer's national security adviser is yet another judicial set back for Der Trumpenführer's Muslim ban.  This time the ruling came in Virginia in response to a lawsuit filed by Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring.  While the ruling is not nationwide in scope - largely because a nationwide stay is already in place - it got to the core of the ban: it was a ban targeted at a specific religious group.  Here are highlights from the Washington Post:
A federal judge in Alexandria has issued a preliminary injunction against President Trump’s travel ban, dealing another blow to the White House attempt to bar residents of seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the United States.
The executive order, Judge Leonie M. Brinkema concluded, probably violates the First Amendment’s protections for freedom of religion.
Brinkema’s order applies only to Virginia residents and students, or employees of Virginia schools. A nationwide freeze has been in place for several days, having been issued in Washington state and upheld by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.
In her opinion, Brinkema wrote that the Commonwealth of Virginia “has produced unrebutted evidence” that the order “was not motivated by rational national security concerns” but “religious prejudice” toward Muslims. She cited Trump’s statements before taking office, as well as an interview in which former New York City mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani (R) said that the president wanted a “Muslim ban.”
“The ‘Muslim Ban’ was a centerpiece of the president’s campaign for months, and the press release calling for it was still available on his website as of the day this Memorandum Opinion is being entered,” Brinkema wrote.
The case against the order in Virginia is being litigated by the state’s attorney general, Mark R. Herring (D). It was originally brought by lawyers for the Legal Aid Justice Center who were representing two Yemeni brothers turned away after landing at Dulles International Airport. The brothers have since been allowed into the country.
At the hearing, a lawyer for the Justice Department produced only a copy of the order as evidence, while arguing that Virginia has no standing to challenge the ban and federal courts have no power to weigh in on its rationale.
Brinkema rejected that argument. “Maximum power does not mean absolute power,” she wrote. “Every presidential action must still comply with the limits set by Congress’ delegation of power and the constraints of the Constitution, including the Bill of Rights.”
She also dismissed the idea that a halt on the ban would cause any harm. On the other hand, she said, the Commonwealth produced evidence that the ban is having a negative impact on students and faculty who can no longer leave the country for fear of losing their visas or who are no longer sure they can study in the state.


The judge concluded it was irrelevant that the ban does not cover all or even most Muslims, as long as Muslims were the target.  “It is a discriminatory purpose that matters, no matter how inefficient the execution,” she wrote. 

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