The American Bar Association urged President Donald Trump Monday to withdraw the executive order "Protecting the Nation from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States," which restricts immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries, suspends all refugee admission for 120 days and indefinitely suspends the entry of Syrian refugees.
By voice vote, the ABA House of Delegates, the association's policy-making body, adopted resolution 10C calling on the executive branch to ensure full, prompt, and uniform compliance with court orders addressing the executive order.
The Housemade up of 589 members representing state and local bar associations, ABA entities and ABA-affiliated organizationsalso urged the administration to take care that all executive orders regarding border security, immigration enforcement and terrorism:
- Respect the bounds of the U.S. Constitution and due process rights.
- Not use religion or nationality as a basis for barring an otherwise eligible individual from admission to the United States.
- Adhere to the U.S.'s international law obligations relating to the status of refugees and to the principle of non-refoulement.
- Facilitate a transparent, accessible, fair and efficient system of administering the immigration laws and policies of the United States and ensure protection for refugees, asylum seekers, torture victims and others deserving of humanitarian refuge.
In Resolution 10B, the House also reaffirmed the ABA's support of legal protection for refugees, asylum seekers, torture victims, and others deserving of humanitarian refuge. It urged Congress to adopt additional legislation to appropriate funds for refugee applications and processing, and mandate that refugees receive an appropriate individualized assessment in a timely fashion that excludes national origin and religion as the basis for making such determination.
The association's policy-making body discussion took place at the James L. Knight Center of the Hyatt Regency Miami. The session concluded the 2017 ABA Midyear Meeting, which began Feb. 1.
Published: Wed, Feb 08, 2017