Commentary by James Shott
If you have read legal documents you will likely have noticed how detailed, specific and often obtuse the language is. The purpose of such language is to assure that the intent of the document is clearly set forth, and this language is well understood by lawyers.
If you have read legal documents you will likely have noticed how detailed, specific and often obtuse the language is. The purpose of such language is to assure that the intent of the document is clearly set forth, and this language is well understood by lawyers.
However, despite the careful legal wording of President
Donald Trump’s Executive Order (EO) temporarily suspending travel to the U.S.
from seven countries with close ties to terrorism, U.S. District Judge James
Robart in Washington found problems with the document last month, and
issued a temporary stay. A revised second version of that EO, rewritten to avoid
the objectionable parts of the first one, including removing one of the seven countries
on the list, was found unacceptable by two other federal judges, U.S.
District Court Judge Derrick Watson in Hawaii, and Maryland U.S. District Court
Judge Theodore Chuang.
The revised document may as well have been written in the language of the Klingons,
because these two judges ignored the Order itself, rejecting the travel
suspension due to negative statements about Muslim
immigrants Trump made during the campaign.
Even though the people who have to
implement the EO must do only what it says, the judges, in their infinite
wisdom, decided that what they imagine to be the thinking of the president is
more important than what the document actually mandates, even though those who
follow the EO will have no knowledge of what the president thinks, and therefore
no obligation to implement those opinions.
Apparently, these federal judges are confused about their
jobs or perhaps just don’t care about professional ethics or their sworn
duties. They apparently believe that in ruling on a legal document they should ignore
the actual document that is being challenged, and instead rely on speculation
about the opinions of the document’s creator, and act to protect certain rights
of immigrants and foreigners that the Constitution does not assign to them.
Under 8 U.S. Code § 1182(f) Congress granted the President
broad discretion to suspend the entry of “any class of aliens” into the United
States, and independently broad discretion over the refugee program.
That section reads: “Suspension of entry or imposition
of restrictions by President - Whenever the President finds that the entry of
any aliens or of any class of aliens into the United States would be
detrimental to the interests of the United States, he may by proclamation, and
for such period as he shall deem necessary, suspend the entry of all aliens or
any class of aliens as immigrants or nonimmigrants, or impose on the entry of
aliens any restrictions he may deem to be appropriate.” This section of the law
goes on to assign the Attorney General authority over activities by airlines
bringing in non-citizen passengers, further assigning complete authority over
entry to the country to the executive branch of the government, not the
judiciary.
The law is crystal clear in its meaning, and does not provide
as exceptions to the power of the President the personal opinions of federal
judges or the beliefs or motives that these unelected referees ascribe to the
president.
Perhaps the reason these judges didn’t want to rule on the
actual language and effect of the Order is that it disagrees with their personal
opinions. The Heritage Foundation’s Hans Von Spakovsky, a former Department of
Justice lawyer, told Breitbart, “I don’t think [these judges] have any
professional shame about it — in fact, they’re being applauded by newspaper
editors for actually ignoring the law and [Supreme Court] rulings based on
their own personal policy preferences.”
He notes that, despite the plain text of the law and prior
Supreme Court decisions, these rulings are “destructive of the rule of law,
which is the entire basis of our Republic.” This, he said, “is a very bad
development that threatens our democracy … [and] it looks like it is going to
get worse [because] we’re going to have more and more litigation, and it is
very clear that the progressive left wants to use the courts to fight the way
our democracy works,” he said, adding “I think what they doing is very
anti-democratic.”
Indeed. What can be worse for a country that lives by the
rule of law than to have some judges that do not follow or honor the law or the
Constitution, but instead make law from the bench or twist laws to suit their
personal or political preferences? That is what liberal judges do, and this
behavior has reached crisis proportions.
These legal rulings raise important questions:
What is the proper response to a federal court ruling that is so plainly contrary to the law? Should the Trump administration follow a clearly illegal ruling and attempt to overturn it though a lengthy appeal process, or defy the federal courts?
What should happen to judges who issue rulings are at odds with laws and the Constitution that they are sworn to uphold?
Aren’t these judges directly responsible for any harm done to American citizens as a result of persons with the intent to do harm getting into the country by virtue of their rulings?
Cross-posted from Observations
What is the proper response to a federal court ruling that is so plainly contrary to the law? Should the Trump administration follow a clearly illegal ruling and attempt to overturn it though a lengthy appeal process, or defy the federal courts?
What should happen to judges who issue rulings are at odds with laws and the Constitution that they are sworn to uphold?
Aren’t these judges directly responsible for any harm done to American citizens as a result of persons with the intent to do harm getting into the country by virtue of their rulings?
Cross-posted from Observations
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