The Hawaii judge who blocked President Donald Trump’s revised executive order on immigration two weeks ago extended his nationwide stay Wednesday, brushing aside the Trump administration’s argument that the scope of his ruling is too broad.
In a 24-page opinion, U.S. District Court Judge Derrick Watson ruled that the Trump administration offered no new arguments to change his mind.
“National security is unquestionably of vital importance to the public interest,” Watson wrote. “The same is true with respect to affording appropriate deference to the president’s constitutional and statutory responsibilities to set immigration policy and provide for the national defense. Upon careful consideration of the totality of the circumstances, however, the court reaffirms its prior finding that the balance of equities and public interest weigh in favor of maintaining the status quo.”
The legal question before Watson was whether his temporary restraining order, issued just hours before the travel ban was to take effect March 16, should be turned into a preliminary injunction — a longer-lasting stay that will remain in place until the case is resolved.
Last week, the filed a request for the longer injunction, noting that the standards for issuing both injunctions are “substantially identical.”
In an hour-long hearing Wednesday, the Trump administration opposed Hawaii’s request, arguing that Watson’s ruling should at least be narrowed.
Acting Assistant Attorney General Chad Readler, who phoned in from Washington, D.C., urged Watson to exempt key parts of the revised order — one provision that suspends refugee resettlements, as well as several subsections of another provision that temporarily halts the issuance of new visas to citizens of six Muslim-majority countries.
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Readler focused his argument largely on Hawaii’s legal standing to sue, saying that the state can point to no specific injury for a broader ruling.
Readler told Watson that Hawaii has done little with refugees — accepting only 20 out of the 538,297 refugees who have been resettled in the United States during the past eight fiscal years.
Readler’s argument, however, didn’t get much traction with Watson, who snapped: “Is this a mathematical exercise? That 20 isn’t enough, but 25 is? … What do I make of that?”
Readler persisted, urging Watson to take into account the from other jurisdictions that exempt the refugee provision.
But Hawaii Attorney General Doug Chin told Watson that the travel ban聽was still聽“infected” with “religious animus” against Muslims — in violation of the First Amendment’s establishment clause.
“The religious animus taints the entire policy,” Chin said, calling attention to Trump’s that the revised order is a “watered-down version” of the original travel ban. “It’s as if there鈥檚 a flashing neon sign behind them saying, 鈥楳uslim ban, Muslim ban.'”
“We cannot fault the president for being politically incorrect, but we do fault him for being constitutionally incorrect,” Chin added.
In his ruling, Watson rejected the Trump administration’s argument that he shouldn’t “look behind the four corners of the executive order” to assess whether it violates the First Amendment.
“No binding authority … has decreed that establishment clause jurisprudence ends at the executive’s door,” Watson wrote. “In fact, every court that has considered whether to apply the establishment clause to either the executive order or its predecessor (regardless of the ultimate outcome) has done so.”
Watson then sided with Chin, observing that the “historical context” of the travel ban is “full of religious animus, invective and obvious pretext.”
“It is no wonder that the government urges the court to altogether ignore that history and context,” Watson wrote. “The court will not crawl into a corner, pull the shutters closed and pretend it has not seen what it has.”
Watson also concluded that it “makes little sense” to narrow the scope of his ruling.
“That is because the entirety of the executive order runs afoul of the establishment clause where ‘openly available data support a commonsense conclusion that a religious objective permeated the government’s action,'” Watson wrote.
Watson’s ruling essentially leaves the Trump administration with two options — either to appeal it to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld an injunction issued by a federal judge in Seattle against the , or let it stand while defending the revised order on the merits.
In a statement, Chin hailed Watson’s ruling:
You can read Watson’s ruling here:
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About the Author
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Rui Kaneya is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at rkaneya@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .