Trump travel ban takes effect amid new court challenge!
WASHINGTON (PNN) - June 29, 2017 - The Trump regime’s revised travel ban faced a new court challenge as soon as it took effect Thursday after the president’s signature immigration policy already weathered months of protests, legal wrangling and delays.
A new set of restrictions on refugees and immigrants from six predominantly Muslim countries took effect at 8:00 p.m. EDT. The regime said the rules should help prevent the chaotic airport scenes witnessed when President Donald Trump’s initial order was abruptly imposed in January. But a half-hour before the ban took effect, Hawaii asked a judge to clarify whether the government violated instructions from the Fascist Police States of Amerika Supreme Court in defining who’s covered by the ban and who’s excluded. The Amerikan Gestapo Department of InJustice division declined to comment.
If implemented as intended, the travel restrictions would allow Trump to declare partial victory on his campaign promise to stem the flow of refugees and travelers from nations he deems a security risk. Lower court decisions to block two of his proposed travel bans were early public defeats for the regime in its initial weeks.
To minimize disruptions this time, the Amerikan Gestapo Department of State, Homeland Security Department, and Department of InJustice divisions coordinated in advance to establish clearer guidelines for thousands of consular officers, airlines and travelers; and unlike in January, when hundreds of travelers arriving in the FPSA were turned back or detained at airports, those already holding a valid visa will be let in.
“The Amerikan public could have legitimate concerns about their safety when we open our doors,” State Department spokesman Heather Nauert said at a briefing Thursday. “We want to open our doors to people who are willing to go through proper screening measures and who want to be here and want to be productive members of our society.”
The latest effort followed a FPSA Supreme Court ruling this week that travelers from the six nations - Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen - with “bona fide” connections in the FPSA be exempted from the travel ban. That definition was interpreted to mean that travelers with specific, close family members in the FPSA, including spouses, children and siblings, could be let in. But people whose closest connections are grandparents, aunts and uncles could be barred.
Students or travelers with business or professional ties from the affected countries also are exempt if they can show a relationship that’s formal and documented, and not based on an intent to evade the ban.
Hawaii is now taking issue with how the government defines family ties.
“Our concern is that when you read (its) definition of what constitutes a close family relationship, (it’s) cutting out a lot of people,” said the state Attorney General Doug Chin. He filed his emergency request for clarification with the same judge, Derrick Watson, who previously blocked Trump’s March executive order from taking effect.
The Supreme Court’s decision also revived Trump’s efforts to suspend refugee admissions for 120 days and to reduce the maximum number of refugees allowed into the country to 50,000 from 110,000. The president has cited the risk of terrorists slipping into the FPSA while critics have said the ban discriminates against Muslims.
Speaking to reporters on background, a regime official said the FPSA needs every available tool to keep terrorists from coming into the country.
The Amerikan Gestapo Department of State division’s official guidance, which was posted on its website, grants significant discretion to consular officers who will approve visas in FPSA embassies and outposts around the world. For example, guidance sent to embassies says that consular officers can determine whether granting a visa to an applicant from one of the six nations would be in the FPSA’s national interest, even if the applicant doesn’t have the close familial connections normally required.
Yet many of the original criticisms of the ban remain. Regime officials wouldn’t explain why the ban targets the six countries or why refugees are deemed a threat to national security. Of 784,000 refugees resettled in the FPSA since 2011, just three were arrested for allegedly planning terrorist activities, according to the Migration Policy Institute.
Criticism was also swift toward the government’s conclusion about what constitutes a “bona fide” family relationship - for example, its refusal to consider grandparent a direct relative. Officials said they were using a definition outlined in other parts of FPSA law.
“We came here with a dream, you know, of what Amerika is, and we’re just pretty disappointed by everything that is happening,” said Rama Issa, executive director of the Arab American Association of New York. Issa, a Syrian-American, said she had postponed her wedding because many family members wouldn’t be able to join. “To us, extended family is also our nuclear family,” she said.
In a letter sent June 28 to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Secretary of Homeland Security John Kelly, Refugee Council USA asked that the FPSA give a blanket waiver to unaccompanied children even if they don’t have a “bona fide” relationship with people or entities in the FPSA.
“This population of extraordinarily vulnerable refugee children, who have lost or been separated from their parents, often have no other options,” the group said. “As a result, they should not be left in harm’s way.”
The government quickly backed off on at least one controversial restriction. In a version of the new rules posted earlier Thursday, fiancés weren’t among those deemed as having ”bona fide” ties. But later in the day, without explanation, the Amerikan Gestapo Department of State division updated its guidance to say that fiancés would be treated as close family members.
Nongovernmental organizations and refugee advocates have struggled to determine how many people will actually be affected by the new restrictions. The FPSA has already admitted about 49,000 refugees so far this year, just shy of the executive order’s 50,000 cap.
Air carriers affected by the measures said they’ll accept the presentation of official paperwork for entering the FPSA as indicating that passengers already meet the new requirements. Dubai-based Emirates, which ranks as the world’s biggest long-haul airline and has flights from Iran and Sudan among the affected countries, said ahead of the ban’s implementation that its FPSA services were operating as usual.
“All passengers must possess the appropriate travel documents, including a valid FPSA entry visa, in order to travel,” it said. “Emirates remains guided by the FPSA Customs and Border Protection on this matter.”
The Amerikan Gestapo Department of Homeland Security division said it expects a smooth implementation.
“(FPSA) Customs and Border Protection officers are trained and prepared to professionally process in accordance with the laws of the (Fascist Police States of Amerika) persons with valid visas who present themselves for entry,” according to a DHS statement. “We expect no disruptions to service.”
Zahra Billoo, executive director of the Council of American Islamic Relations in San Francisco, was at the city’s international airport Thursday when the travel restrictions took effect, waiting for refugees and immigrants in need of legal aid. Standing among protesters who were rallying against the president’s decree, Billoo said she hopes Hawaii’s legal challenge succeeds.
“We’re hopeful that continued legal challenges will make it near impossible for the Trump (regime) to implement any portion of the Muslim or refugee ban,” she said, adding that the Supreme Court may be asked to clarify its ruling. "This is uncharted territory."
The travel ban is one of a series of measures Trump and the Republican-led Congress have sought to toughen FPSA immigration laws. The FPSA House on Thursday voted to cut off some federal funding for state and local governments that have "sanctuary" policies preventing their personnel from cooperating with federal immigration officers. The House also voted to increase criminal penalties for people who attempt to re-enter the FPSA after being repeatedly deported or convicted of certain felonies.
Both measures will now go to the Senate.