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Decried as Muslim ban, will US President decree pass legal muster?

The White House has rolled out a process that aims to avoid a repeat of the confusion caused by its first travel ban.

Although similar to the first travel ban, Trump's revised immigration order has been changed in significant ways to pass muster with US federal courts

But can they succeed in overturning a measure that was deliberately crafted to remove the red flags raised by US courts over the first attempt? That may be more difficult.

The White House has rolled out a process that aims to avoid a repeat of the confusion caused by its first travel ban, imposed with no notice and little preparation one week into Trump's presidency.

This time, it's unlikely there will be a backdrop of airport chaos and mass detentions to help lawyers make the case that people's rights are being trampled.

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The new order issued Monday suspends US entry for all refugees for 120 days, and suspends the issuing of new visas for nationals of Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Yemen and Sudan for 90 days.

Although similar to the first travel ban, it has been changed in significant ways to pass muster with the courts.

For one, the new restrictions do not go into effect until March 16, giving travelers 10 days to prepare for the changes.

Crucially, the new order exempts permanent US residents and existing visa-holders and allows for waivers on a case-by-case basis. It also drops Iraq from the list.

The strategy appears designed to address the situations that ignited outrage and made the earlier travel ban politically radioactive.

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Among the prominent cases was that of an Iranian baby who could not travel for specialized medical treatment in the United States. That could now be dealt with using a waiver.

Foreign students and Silicon Valley executives were also stranded abroad, and entire families detained at airports. As long as they have visas under the new rules, they should no longer face that risk.

Muslim ban?

Lawyers for the state of Hawaii on Tuesday told a US district court there of their plan to file a challenge to the revised ban on Wednesday, which would probably make it the first legal test.

The state has asked for an expedited process to consider a motion for a temporary restraining order on the ban. If the judge agrees, "this schedule will allow the court to hear the state's motion before the new travel ban goes into effect on March 16," Hawaii's attorney general Douglas Chin said in a statement.

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The federal judge who blocked the first ban in the state of Washington last month was persuaded by the argument of two state attorneys general that it was causing "irreparable harm." It is less clear those arguments would prevail the next time around.

"We are carefully reviewing the new executive order to determine its impacts on Washington state and our next legal steps," Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson said Monday.

He said he was still concerned but needed two or three days to decide on next steps.

'Backdoor ban'

Camille Mackler, director of legal initiatives at the New York Immigration Coalition, called Trump's new order a "backdoor Muslim ban."

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"We still think it's as problematic as the first travel ban," she said. "It didn't happen in a vacuum, it happened within the context of the comments that have been made before and since the election, this sort of broader war on immigrants that the Trump administration is fighting."

The next wave of legal challenges will have to directly confront the question of whether the immigration order constitutes a Muslim ban, an issue the courts have so far set aside.

"While the White House may have made changes to the ban, the intent to discriminate against Muslims remains," New York attorney general Eric Schneiderman said.

jpegMpeg4-1280x720The administration has tried to make it harder to prove religious discrimination by stripping out language that would have given preference to religious minorities once refugees are allowed in again.

Critics had said the preference benefiting Christians underscored that the ban was directed at Muslims.

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"I believe the new order will withstand legal challenges as it's drafted in a fashion as to not be a religious ban, but a ban on individuals coming from compromised governments and failed states," said Republican Senator Lindsey Graham.

The Trump administration considers three of the nations targeted -- Iran, Sudan and Syria -- as state sponsors of terrorism, and the other three as "safe havens" for terror operatives.

Its critics question the list, which includes countries whose citizens have never been involved in terror attacks in the United States.

And they point to Trump's own past campaign statements promising to bar entry to Muslims as evidence of animus that will be difficult to shake.

"The clear intent is to convince the courts that the ban is the result of careful deliberation rather than religious animus," said Elizabeth Goitein, co-director of the Brennan Center for Justice's Liberty and National Security Program.

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"But the tactical tweaks in this latest edition cannot rescue the order's constitutionality," she added.

"Underneath the softened rhetoric and other adjustments lies the same poisonous policy: an effort to restrict Muslims' entry into the United States."

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