And programs like the Diversity Visa program are under the exceptions specifically listed.
Trump's Muslim Ban isn't.
But, maybe the government should have hired you or BDK to argue their case for them... cause they keep losing.


Dershwitz, one of the most known legal minds in the US, certainly no conservative or Trump fan, laid out why he thinks Trumps temporary ban will be upheld by SCOTUS (edit- if SCOTUS ends up hearing it).Skjellyfetti wrote:Well, we've had how many courts rule on this so far? But, I guess they're all just liberals off on an island in the Pacific somewhere.BDKJMU wrote:I'd be interested to hear what our resident immigration expert or our attorneys on here have to say on this...
From the 4th Circuit's ruling today:
But, I agree that SCOTUS should probably hear this at some point. Probably not until after August at the earliest, though. It will be awhile.Because Section 2(c) [of the EO] has the practical effect of halting the issuance of immigrant visas on the basis of nationality, the court reasoned, it is inconsistent with 1152(a)1(A) [what I linked]. To that extent - and contrary to the Government's position - the court found that Presidential authority under 1182(f) and 1185(a)(1) [what BDK linked] is cabined by the INA's prohibition on nationality-based discrimination in visa issuance.


Jelly- the ban is absolutely about NIVsSkjellyfetti wrote:They're not applying it to non-immigrant visas.
And programs like the Diversity Visa program are under the exceptions specifically listed.
Trump's Muslim Ban isn't.
But, maybe the government should have hired you or BDK to argue their case for them... cause they keep losing.


First off, that wouldn't matter-Skjellyfetti wrote:I wasn't saying the ban was about only non-immigrant visas. I was saying that section of their ruling was about how it applied specifically to immigrant visas.
The ban is for all entry across the board (well, almost - exceptions for diplomats and UN, etc). I mean, their first version even included permanent residents - not clear if that was intentional or due to incompetence.
Keeping it limited to only NIVs might be a good suggestion for their third try, though.


Yeah, the ruling and the dissent are pretty simplistic opinions (not in a bad way, just that they aren't complicated) - the ruling against the ban is because Trump said in the campaign that he wants to ban Muslims and the dissent is if you just read the EO and never heard things said during the campaign then the EO would be perfectly valid. Will be an interesting ruling from SCOTUS if they take it - like I said, if it wasn't Trump issuing the EO then the EO would probably be okay. I don't like Trump and I don't like the travel ban but I'm finding it hard to square that with what appears to be, as the dissent said, a perfectly constitutional EO.Ivytalk wrote:Read the Niemeyer dissent. The majority turns precedent on its head for political reasons.



Agreed, now it's almost just about precedent and what's allowed and what's not allowed. The ban was never anything more than cosmetic anyway - no one would really say it was an example of good policy. On the contrary, it was more style and tone than anything tangible. Typical Trump at that. But now the Courts have stepped into it and in the Circuit Court ruling pretty much dismissed what was written and judged it almost solely on what they thought Trump was trying to do, even if he wasn't actually doing it. It's a weird spot to be and an even more awkward position for the SCOTUS to try to walk back the Circuit Court ruling.CID1990 wrote:At this point the main justification for the "pause" has passed - those "extreme vetting" procedures are already rolling out
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But that will be what they will decide - that's what the majority in the Circuit Court was saying (they extensively mined his campaign comments) and that's what the dissent was all about (the actual executive order, as it was written and just what was written). There's a precedent that could change if the courts are going to decide that what is written is no longer what they're judging. Even in an age like we live in today with who's in the White House (but not on weekends).Chizzang wrote:At no point is the court required to separate:
Blabber mouth crazy Trump from President Trump


Intent...GannonFan wrote:But that will be what they will decide - that's what the majority in the Circuit Court was saying (they extensively mined his campaign comments) and that's what the dissent was all about (the actual executive order, as it was written and just what was written). There's a precedent that could change if the courts are going to decide that what is written is no longer what they're judging. Even in an age like we live in today with who's in the White House (but not on weekends).Chizzang wrote:At no point is the court required to separate:
Blabber mouth crazy Trump from President Trump

Yep, it doesn't matter if the time period for utilizing the ban has expired. SCOTUS needs to rule on whether "A" POTUS has the authority to issue such a ban as it was written. Period.GannonFan wrote:But that will be what they will decide - that's what the majority in the Circuit Court was saying (they extensively mined his campaign comments) and that's what the dissent was all about (the actual executive order, as it was written and just what was written). There's a precedent that could change if the courts are going to decide that what is written is no longer what they're judging. Even in an age like we live in today with who's in the White House (but not on weekends).Chizzang wrote:At no point is the court required to separate:
Blabber mouth crazy Trump from President Trump




What are you using to get the splooge off your monitor?BDKJMU wrote:All those libtard state Attorney Generals (WA, HI, etc) that had sued to overturn the ban through the liberal 9th circuit can suck it..

The courts were shopped for those decisionsBDKJMU wrote:All those libtard state Attorney Generals (WA, HI, etc) that had sued to overturn the ban through the liberal 9th circuit can suck it..


Try to keep up JellySkjellyfetti wrote:The cases weren't only brought by states' attorney generals. There were also dozens of private suits.
The one that SCOTUS will be hearing is a private suit that the Fourth Circuit in Richmond, VA upheld.
