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The Supreme Court upheld President Trump’s travel ban in a 5–4 decision.

The travel

ban undermines a core principle of the U.S. immigration system since 1965: that the law

will not discriminate against immigrants based on nationality or place of birth. The
president has rewritten our immigration laws as he sees fit based on the thinnest
national security pretext, setting a dangerous precedent for the future.

The ban entirely lacks any reasonable basis in the facts. Nationals of the targeted
countries have not carried out any deadly terrorist attacks in the United States, and they

are also much less likely to commit other crimes in the United States. Nor are their

governments less able or willing than others to share information or adopt certain

identity management protocols.

We now know that the report that supposedly provided the detailed, “extensive,” and

“thorough” analysis of every country in the world was just 17 pages, giving barely

a tenth of a page to summarize facts relating to 200 countries. It was great to see

Justice Sotomayor raise this fact in her dissent (p. 19), possibly as a result

of a letter that Cato adjunct Ilya Somin sent to the court summarizing a post that

I wrote on the subject.

As a matter of policy, no president should be given such broad power to determine


immigration law. While the travel ban currently affects only a small share of immigrants

and foreign travelers, all legal immigrants should be concerned that the president will
wield this power against them next. Congress should immediately intervene to preserve
its power to determine immigration policy.

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