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by gizmo686 3434 days ago
>but I don't remember that being a scandal.

I do remember that being a scandal.

To your main point, a story has been going around that a court has put a stay on the executive order. If true, this would mean that enforcing the order is currently illegal; and doing so could be called a "coup" by the executive branch (although I don't think this technically qualifies as a coup).

Having said that, my understanding is that the referenced court case only applies to the specific individuals who sued, so enforcement of the order is still legal in all other cases.

3 comments

One rule the courts generally follow is that they try to limit the scope of their rulings. Plus, of course, the country is divided into several federal districts, and a ruling in one district doesn't necessarily apply to other districts. So I understood the injunction out of a San Francisco courtroom only applied to particular travelers whom, via the ACLU, had filed a challenge to how the order was applied to them. The injunction does not apply to other travelers, other federal districts, or people who are affected by the order for other reasons.

I understand the DHS statement to simply amount to "we aren't lawyers, so until a judge rules on whether the entire order is constitutional, we have to assume it is and act accordingly. We have lawyers on staff who will tell us how other rulings affect our actions, and how far those rulings go."

It's important to remember that executive orders are legally binding on people who work for the president, but not anyone else. Usually, they say how an ambiguous law will be interpreted, or they add limitations on top of what the law requires.

In this case, the president has directed various people to take certain actions. The courts will have to determine if those actions are legal. It wouldn't surprise me if some actions are legal (cabinet members are supposed to review the policies for the refugee program) and others aren't (prioritize immigrants based on their religion). But DHS doesn't get to conduct its own review of the order; they have to assume the whole thing is legally binding.

If multiple federal courts start granting injunctions against particular parts of the order, then things might change. I'm not sure how that works; although I am sure that government-paid lawyers will conduct their own review of the order, and I strongly suspect that the president has to approve any decisions to not implement a portion of an executive order.

News stories I've seen today suggest that the order covers more people than I expected. Even so, people working for DHS are legally bound to enforce the portions of the order that aren't covered by the injunction (and, of course, to honor the injunction for the people it covers).
> a story has been going around that a court has put a stay on the executive order.

That story is false (at least as far as I know). The stay was put on one detail of the implementation of the order, not the whole order - namely, on deporting green card holders that has already arrived in US airports.

See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darweesh_v._Trump

> Having said that, my understanding is that the referenced court case only applies to the specific individuals who sued

ACLU is seeking class action status, but in the meantime if several judges agreed that the stay is warranted I imagine it would be not hard for any person (with access to law assistance etc. of course) to be able to obtain similar order.

I don't remember a call to assassination being the top upvoted comment on HN.

Maybe you can link me to the comment thread where HN was breathless about the need for assassination or civil war.

What are you referring to? I don't see any such words in either the top comment (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13512998) or your parent (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13513065). Perhaps you're equating coup d'état with assassination? If so, that's incorrect: coup d'état is just an illegitimate overthrow. Am I misunderstanding your post?