“SEE you at the Supreme Court!”, Donald Trump tweeted angrily on April 26th, after his travel ban suffered a third defeat in a federal court. On June 1st, late in the evening, the president followed through on that threat. The Department of Justice filed a sheaf of papers with America’s highest tribunal, asking it to reinstate Mr Trump’s second executive order to pause America’s refugee programme and halt travel from six Muslim-majority nations. The president’s lawyers are pursuing a dual-track strategy: they would like the Supreme Court to hear the full appeal on an expedited schedule, and they request—since “expedited” in this slow-moving institution still means months—that in the meantime the justices issue a stay on unfavourable lower court rulings and let the order order take effect.
After his hastily released first travel ban, issued on January 27th, was blocked by a Seattle judge and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals refused to lift the stay, Mr Trump went back to the drawing board. His somewhat sanitised...Continue reading
Source: United States http://ift.tt/2qOGJCZ
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