Former Rolling Stone Editor Picks Apart the Media's Latest Attempt to Gaslight Us
About Those Alleged Posts of Snipers on the Campuses of Indiana and Ohio...
Iran's Nightmares
Restore Order and Crush the Campus Jihadist Thugs
The Problem Is Academia
Mounting Debt Accumulation Can’t Go On Forever. It Won’t.
Is Arizona Turning Blue? The Latest Voter Registration Numbers Tell a Different Story.
Washington Should Clip Qatar’s Media Wing
The Most Disturbing Part of It
Inept Microsoft is Compromising National Security
Leftist Activists Said 'Believe All Women' Didn’t Apply to Me
Biden Fails Moral Leadership Test in Handling Anti-Semitic Campus Protests
Sanctuary Cities Defund the Police to Pay for Illegal Immigration
The Election, the Debt, and our Future
Despite Plenty of Pitfalls, Biden Doubles Down on Off Shore Wind Farms
Tipsheet

Supreme Court OKs Expanded List of Relatives Exempt From Travel Ban

In its latest ruling on President Trump’s travel ban, the Supreme Court gave the green light to a broader list of close family members who can get visas to travel to the U.S. during the 90-day period the president’s executive order is in place.

Advertisement

The move declined to put an end to a federal judge in Hawaii’s ruling, which said the State Department’s initial list of close family members was too restrictive and declared grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces, nephews, and siblings-in-law should also be considered close family members and exempt from the travel ban.

But, in a partial win for the Trump administration, the justices blocked a separate part of the federal judge’s ruling regarding refugees who have no family ties in the country.

The state of Hawaii had argued that any refugee who had an arrangement with a U.S.-based aid group to come to the U.S. should also be exempt from the travel ban. The justices said the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, based in California, should decide that question.

That means that up to 24,000 refugees who already have been assigned to a resettlement organization will not be able to be admitted.

The executive order applies to visa applicants from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen and imposes a 120-day ban on refugees from anywhere in the world.

The court's brief order was unsigned, but the court's three most conservative members, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch, said they would have put the entire Hawaii ruling on hold. (NBC)

Advertisement

The Court will fully review the travel ban during its new term on Oct. 10.  

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement