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Hawaii was the first state to challenge Trump's new travel ban — here's why it says the order is still unconstitutional

Donald Trump
U.S. President Donald Trump attends a meeting with U.S. House Deputy Whip team at the East room of the White House in Washington, U.S. March 7, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

A federal judge in Hawaii will hear arguments from state lawyers next Wednesday regarding President Donald Trump's revised executive order restricting travel from six majority-Muslim countries.

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The lawyers are seeking a temporary restraining order on the ban, which was signed on Monday, weeks after the original order was challenged in courtrooms across the country and ultimately blocked from reinstatement by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

The revised order no longer bars current visa holders and green card holders from entering the US, and removes Iraq from the list of affected countries, which now include just Iran, Syria, Somalia, Sudan, Libya, and Yemen. It also includes Syrian refugees as part of its 120-day refugee admissions suspension, whereas previously Syrian refugees were barred indefinitely.

Unlike the original order, this ban also gave advanced notice of its implementation, which will occur March 16 unless a judge grants a restraining order.

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State attorneys for Hawaii argued in their amended complaint that the order will cause "grave injury" to Muslims in Hawaii, and will affect its foreign students and workers and upset the state's tourism-based economy.

"President Trump's new Executive Order is antithetical to Hawaii's State identity and spirit," the complaint argues.

"It is damaging Hawaii's institutions, harming its economy, and eroding Hawaii's sovereign interests in maintaining the separation between church and state as well as in welcoming persons from all nations around the world into the fabric of its society."

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The state's attorneys argued that the revised order violates the First Amendment and Fifth Amendment by having the effect and intent of "disfavoring Islam," inflicting harm on Hawaii's residents, discriminating against individuals based on their religion and nationality, and violating individuals of due process rights.

The complaint lists its lead plaintiff as Ismail Elshikh, the Imam of the Muslim Association of Hawaii, whose mother-in-law lives in Syria and could be prevented by the ban from obtaining a visa to visit the state.

The state's lawyers argued that Elshikh and his family will be subjected to "discrimination and second-class treatment."

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The complaint also noted that the state hosts 12,000 foreign students and international faculty members, many of whom are from the seven countries identified in Trump's original order, including at least 27 graduate students currently studying at the University of Hawaii.

Foreign students paid more than $400 million into the Hawaiian economy through their tuition, fees, and living expenses, and supported 7,590 jobs and generated more than $43 million in state taxes, the complaint said.

The lawyers also argued that tourism is Hawaii's "lead economic driver," bringing in 8.7 million visitors in 2015 alone, who accounted for $15 billion in spending.

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'Nationality- and religion-based discrimination'

donald trump executive order extreme vetting
U.S. President Donald Trump (C) signs an Executive Order establising extreme vetting of people coming to the United States after attending a swearing-in ceremony for Defense Secretary James Mattis (R) with Vice President Mike Pence at the Pentagon in Washington, U.S., January 27, 2017. Reuters/Carlos Barria

The complaint, like those against Trump's first order, uses in its arguments previous statements Trump has made, such as those calling for "a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States" and accusing the American immigration system of "importing radical Islamic terrorism to the West."

"President Trump repeatedly campaigned on the promise that he would ban Muslim immigrants and refugees from entering the United States, particularly from Syria, and maintained the same rhetoric after he was elected," the complaint said.

The lawyers also included in the complaint several comments made by Trump allies that appear to call into question the intent of Trump's order. The complaint cites comments made by former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who told Fox News that Trump had consulted him on how to legally implement a "Muslim ban."

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Also cited is Trump's senior adviser Stephen Miller, who told Fox News last month that Trump's revised order would have the same effect as the original one.

The lawsuit also sought to undercut Trump's claims that the order was urgently needed to prevent terrorist attacks. The suit referred to a recent report that found that no fatal terrorist attack in the US since 1975 was perpetrated by a national of one of the six countries.

It also referred to a draft Homeland Security report published by the Associated Press that found that citizenship was an "unlikely indicator" of terrorism threats against the US, and that half of the 82 people inspired by a foreign terrorist group to attempt or carry out a terrorist attack in the US were citizens who had been born in the country.

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"Defendants have exceeded their statutory authority, engaged in nationality- and religion-based discrimination, and failed to vindicate statutory rights guaranteed by the Immigration and Nationality Act," the lawyers argued.

"The Executive Order purports to protect the country from terrorism, but sweeps in millions of people who have absolutely no connection to terrorism."

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