FOR PUBLICATION FILED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS MAR 17 2017
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
STATE OF WASHINGTON and STATE No. 17-35105
OF MINNESOTA,
D.C. No. 2:17-cv-00141
Plaintiffs-Appellees, Western District of Washington,
Seattle
v.
AMENDED ORDER
DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the
United States; U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
HOMELAND SECURITY; REX W.
TILLERSON, Secretary of State; JOHN F.
KELLY, Secretary of the Department of
Homeland Security; UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA,
Defendants-Appellants.
Before: CANBY, CLIFTON, and FRIEDLAND, Circuit Judges.
This court in a published order previously denied a motion of the
government for a stay of a restraining order pending appeal. 847 F.3d 1151 (9th
Cir. 2017). That order became moot when this court granted the government’s
unopposed motion to dismiss its underlying appeal. Order, Mar. 8, 2017. No party
has moved to vacate the published order. A judge of this court called for a vote to
determine whether the court should grant en banc reconsideration in order to
vacate the published order denying the stay. The matter failed to receive a
majority of the votes of the active judges in favor of en banc reconsideration.
Vacatur of the stay order is denied. See U.S. Bancorp Mortgage Co. v. Bonner
Mall Partnership, 513 U.S. 18 (1994) (holding that the “extraordinary remedy of
vacatur” is ordinarily unjustified when post-decision mootness is caused by
voluntary action of the losing party).
This order is being filed along with a concurrence from Judge Reinhardt, a
concurrence from Judge Berzon, a dissent from Judge Kozinski, a dissent from
Judge Bybee, and a dissent from Judge Bea. No further opinions will be filed.
2
FILED
MAR 17 2017
Washington v. Trump, No. 17-35105
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
REINHARDT, J., concurring in the denial of en banc rehearing:
I concur in our court’s decision regarding President Trump’s first Executive
Order – the ban on immigrants and visitors from seven Muslim countries. I also
concur in our court’s determination to stand by that decision, despite the effort of a
small number of our members to overturn or vacate it. Finally, I am proud to be a
part of this court and a judicial system that is independent and courageous, and that
vigorously protects the constitutional rights of all, regardless of the source of any
efforts to weaken or diminish them.
Judge Kozinski’s diatribe, filed today, confirms that a small group of judges,
having failed in their effort to undo this court’s decision with respect to President
Trump’s first Executive Order, now seek on their own, under the guise of a dissent
from the denial of en banc rehearing of an order of voluntary dismissal, to decide
the constitutionality of a second Executive Order that is not before this court. That
is hardly the way the judiciary functions. Peculiar indeed!
FILED
MAR 17 2017
BERZON, J., concurring in the denial of reconsideration en banc. MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
I concur in the court’s denial of rehearing en banc regarding vacatur. I have
full confidence in the panel’s decision. I write to emphasize that, although one
would think otherwise from the three dissents from denial of rehearing en banc,
judges are empowered to decide issues properly before them, not to express their
personal views on legal questions no one has asked them. There is no appeal
currently before us, and so no stay motion pending that appeal currently before us
either. In other words, all the merits commentary in the dissents filed by a small
minority of the judges of this court is entirely out of place.
Here is the background: A three-judge panel of this court decided that the
Government was not entitled to a stay pending appeal of the district court’s
Temporary Restraining Order enjoining enforcement of the President’s January 27,
2017 Executive Order. Washington v. Trump, 847 F.3d 1151, 1156 (9th Cir.
2017). The Government chose not to challenge the panel’s order further but
instead to draft a revised Executive Order, revoking the one that was before this
court’s panel. Exec. Order 13780 of March 6, 2017 §§ 1(i), 13, 82 Fed. Reg.
13209 (published Mar. 9, 2017). That Order was expressly premised on the panel
opinion. Id. § 1(c), (i). The Government has since elected to dismiss this appeal,
1
and with it its stay request; it filed an unopposed motion to dismiss, which we
granted, and did not in that motion ask that the panel, or an en banc court, vacate
the panel’s opinion.1
So there is now no live controversy before our court regarding either the
merits of the underlying case or the propriety of the original restraining order. “In
our system of government, courts have no business deciding legal disputes or
expounding on law in the absence of . . . a case or controversy.” Already, LLC v.
Nike, Inc., 133 S. Ct. 721, 726 (2013) (internal quotation marks omitted) (citing
DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 547 U.S. 332, 341 (2006)).
One judge of the court nonetheless called for a vote of the active judges as to
whether to convene an en banc court for the sole purpose of vacating the panel’s
opinion. As the panel’s March 15, 2017 order, denying rehearing en banc, notes,
vacating an opinion where the losing party’s voluntary actions have mooted the
appeal is ordinarily improper. See U.S. Bancorp Mortg. Co. v. Bonner Mall
P’ship, 513 U.S. 18, 25–27 (1994); United States v. Payton, 593 F.3d 881, 883–86
(9th Cir. 2010). And as Judge Bybee’s dissent reflects, the only justification
1
On the contrary, both parties have since relied on the opinion in staking out
their positions. See Exec. Order 13780 § 1(c), (i); Resp. to Defs.’ Notice of Filing
of Exec. Order at 2-11, Washington v. Trump, No. 2:17-cv-00141-JLR (W.D.
Wash. Mar. 9, 2017).
2
offered for vacating the opinion was a disagreement on the merits.
It is simply not an “exceptional circumstance[]” justifying the “extraordinary
remedy of vacatur” that members of our court disagree with a panel opinion. See
Bonner Mall, 513 U.S. at 26, 29. I am aware of no instance in which we have
convened an en banc panel to vacate a precedential opinion on the basis of its
merits, where no party seeks further appellate review or vacatur. Compare Animal
Legal Def. Fund v. Veneman, 490 F.3d 725, 725–27 (9th Cir. 2007) (en banc)
(Bybee, J., concurring) (vacating a panel opinion in light of a settlement agreement
dependent on vacatur reached after a majority of the court already had voted to
take the case en banc and designated the panel’s opinion non-precedential).
Rather, it is “inappropriate . . . to vacate mooted cases, in which we have no
constitutional power to decide the merits, on the basis of assumptions about the
merits.” Bonner Mall, 513 U.S. at 27.
We as a court make the vast majority of our decisions through three-judge
panels, and we abide by the decisions of those panels absent a decision by a
majority of the active judges that there is good reason to reconsider the case with a
larger, eleven-judge panel, determined by lot. See Fed. R. App. P. 35; Ninth Cir.
R. 35-3; Ninth Cir. Gen. Order 5.1–5.5. Reconsidering a case before an en banc
panel after full argument and coming to a new, reasoned decision—which might
3
reach the same result as the earlier panel decision or might conclude otherwise—is
an entirely different matter from what was sought here: wiping out the panel’s
decision and leaving a vacuum. The en banc court would have no authority
whatever to opine on the merits of the case or the propriety of the district court’s
stay, as there is simply no live appeal before us.
Article III of the United States Constitution precludes us from revisiting the
issues addressed in the panel opinion at this point, as any decision rendered by the
en banc court necessarily would be advisory. See Already LLC, 133 S. Ct. at 726.
A few dissenting colleagues have nonetheless used the decision by the active
judges of the court to decline to rewrite history as the occasion to attack the panel
opinion on myriad grounds. As there is nothing pending before us, it would be
entirely inappropriate to respond in detail—which, I presume, is precisely why the
panel did not do so.
In some ways that is too bad. There is much to discuss, and such discussion
would show that the panel’s opinion was quite correct.
To take but one example: The cases Judge Bybee cites regarding the
applicability of Kleindienst v. Mandel, 408 U.S. 753 (1972), do not govern the case
as it came to the panel. None addresses whether the “facially legitimate and bona
fide reason” standard articulated in Mandel applies to executive action that
4
categorically revokes permission to enter or reenter the country already granted by
the Executive Branch. See Kerry v. Din, 135 S. Ct. 2128, 2139 (2015) (Kennedy,
J., concurring in the judgment); Fiallo v. Bell, 430 U.S. 787, 792–95 (1977);
Cardenas v. United States, 826 F.3d 1164, 1171–72 (9th Cir. 2016); An Na Peng v.
Holder, 673 F.3d 1248, 1258 (9th Cir. 2012); Bustamante v. Mukasey, 531 F.3d
1059, 1062 (9th Cir. 2008); Padilla-Padilla v. Gonzales, 463 F.3d 972, 978–79
(9th Cir. 2006); Nadarajah v. Gonzales, 443 F.3d 1069, 1082 (9th Cir. 2006);
Barthelemy v. Ashcroft, 329 F.3d 1062, 1065–66 (9th Cir. 2003); Noh v. INS, 248
F.3d 938, 942 (9th Cir. 2001). That the Second Circuit applied Mandel’s test to a
program requiring certain non-immigrants to provide information to authorities
(and to face removal only after undergoing “generally applicable legal [removal]
proceedings to enforce pre-existing immigration laws”), see Rajah v. Mukasey, 544
F.3d 427, 439 (2d Cir. 2008), in no way portends that application of Mandel was
appropriate here. The question before our panel, unlike the one in Rajah,
concerned a sweeping Executive Order that barred from entry whole groups of
legal permanent residents and visa holders, among many others, without any
individualized determination regarding the revocation. Presumably recognizing
the weight of these individuals’ constitutional interests, the President excepted
them from the revised Executive Order. See Exec. Order 13780 § 3.
5
Judges Kozinski and Bea likewise used the filing of the order denying
rehearing en banc as to the question of vacating the panel opinion as a platform for
providing their personal views as to the merits of that opinion. Both concern
themselves with issues the panel expressly did not finally resolve. See Bea, J.,
dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc, at 3–6 (discussing parens patriae
standing); Kozinski, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc, at 3–7
(discussing the Establishment Clause); Washington, 847 F.3d at 1161 n.5, 1168
(explicitly declining to reach the questions of parens patriae standing and, after
outlining the parameters of the appropriate Establishment Clause analysis, not
coming to rest on the likelihood of success with respect to that issue). Further,
Judge Kozinski expresses at some length his unhappiness with the invocation of
the panel’s Establishment Clause analysis in a recent district court order, once
again venturing an opinion on an appeal not before us—in this instance, not
because the appeal was withdrawn but because none has yet been filed.2
2
Judge Kozinski also contests the scope of the Temporary Restraining Order
the panel declined to stay, observing that relatively few of the affected individuals
have lawful status. Again, this was not the occasion to opine on the contours of a
now-moot injunction. And, contrary to Judge Kozinski’s representation, the
number of individuals covered directly by the panel’s due process analysis was
substantial—there were tens-of-thousands of individuals whose already approved
visas were revoked. See Mica Rosenberg & Lesley Wroughton, Trump’s Travel
Ban Has Revoked 60,000 Visas for Now, Reuters, Feb. 3, 2017,
(continued...)
6
There will be ample opportunity, and probably soon, see Order Granting
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order, Hawaii v. Trump, No. 1:17-cv-00050
DKW-KSC (D. Haw. Mar. 15, 2017), for further review of the important issues
raised by the President’s Executive Orders. And it is apparent from the
Government’s delay in promulgating a new Executive Order, and in the ten-day
delay in implementation within the revised Order, see Exec. Order 13780 § 14, that
no overwhelming exigency counsels in favor of abandoning the ordinary process of
adversarial appellate review.
I well understand the importance of the cases concerning these Executive
Orders. They raise critical questions concerning the reach of executive and judicial
authority, and they could profoundly affect the lives of our citizens, our
communities, and our position in the world. It is their very seriousness that, in my
view, commands that we as judges speak about them when we have authority to do
so, which is when we are asked by litigants to settle a dispute. The court at large
has not been asked. So my dissenting colleagues should not be engaging in a one-
sided attack on a decision by a duly constituted panel of this court.
We will have this discussion, or one like it. But not now.
2
(...continued)
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-immigration-visas-idUSKBN15I2EW
(citing figures provided by the Government).
7
FILED
Washington v. Trump, No. 17-35105
MAR 17 2017
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
KOZINSKI, Circuit Judge, with whom Circuit Judges BYBEE, CALLAHAN,
BEA and IKUTA join, dissenting from the denial of reconsideration en banc.
I write separately to highlight two peculiar features of the panel’s opinion.
First, the panel’s reasoning rests solely on Due Process. But the vast majority of
foreigners covered by the executive order have no Due Process rights.
Nevertheless, the district court enjoined the order’s travel provisions in their
entirety, even as applied to the millions of aliens who have no constitutional rights
whatsoever because they have never set foot on American soil. See Zadvydas v.
Davis, 533 U.S. 678, 693 (2001); United States v. Verdugo-Urquidez, 494 U.S.
259, 269 (1990). In short, the panel approves the district court’s nationwide
injunction using a rationale that applies to a small percentage of those covered by
the President’s order.
The panel itself seems to acknowledge this strange state of affairs when it
notes that there “might be persons covered” by the district court’s restraining order
who have no Due Process claims. Panel Order at 23. “Might” indeed! The
overwhelming majority of the hundreds of millions of people covered by the order
lack Due Process claims; only a tiny proportion have been accorded lawful status.
Yet the panel offers no explanation for allowing the district court’s extraordinarily
broad restraining order to stand in full. This St. Bernard is being wagged by a flea
page 2
on its tail.
Because we have an obligation to maintain as much of the order as is legal,
we normally ask: Can we keep it operational in a way that avoids constitutional
conflict? The law of our circuit is that we consider the severability of an executive
order just as we would consider the severability of a statute. See Matter of Reyes,
910 F.2d 611, 613 (9th Cir. 1990); see also Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of
Chippewa Indians, 526 U.S. 172, 191 (1999) (assuming without deciding that the
same severability analysis applies to executive orders as to statutes).1 If we applied
this framework to the executive order, we would “refrain from invalidating more of
the [order] than is necessary” and “maintain the [order] in so far as it is valid.”
Regan v. Time, Inc., 468 U.S. 641, 652 (1984). This would have been easy: We
could have approved the injunction as to the relatively few who have lawful status
in the United States and allowed the executive order to cover everyone else. This
workable solution would have respected the President’s prerogative to regulate
immigration as delegated to him by 8 U.S.C. § 1182(f), a provision about which
the panel says nothing.
1
Indeed, we know that this executive order can be severed because the
district court did precisely that: It enjoined the five subsections of the executive
order relating to travel and left the other eleven intact. Washington v. Trump, No.
C17-0141JLR, 2017 WL 462040, at *2 (W.D. Wash. Feb. 3, 2017) (order granting
temporary restraining order).
page 3
Which brings me to the second peculiar feature of the opinion, a topic about
which the panel says all too much: the Establishment Clause. While its opinion
does not come to rest on this issue, the panel still sows chaos by holding “that
evidence of purpose beyond the face of the challenged law may be considered in
evaluating Establishment and Equal Protection Clause claims.” Panel Order at 25.
This matters because one Establishment Clause test requires a showing of secular
purpose,2 and the panel gives its imprimatur to considering the “numerous
statements by the President” about Muslims, most of them made before he was
elected or took office. Id. This holding has continued vitality: It was relied on
only days ago by a district judge in Hawaii who, in the ongoing contretemps
between our circuit and the executive, enjoined the President’s new executive order
nationwide. See Hawaii v. Trump, No. 17-00050 DKW-KSC (D. Haw. Mar. 15,
2017) (order granting temporary restraining order). Indeed, this holding is
spreading like kudzu through the federal courts. See Int’l Refugee Assistance
2
I don’t endorse Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971), as the
appropriate test in this context. Like Judge Bybee, I am puzzled why Lemon
should be plucked from domestic contexts and applied to laws affecting
immigration. See Bybee Dissental at 8 n.6. If we apply this test so casually to
immigration policy, I see no reason it should not apply to every foreign policy
decision made by the political branches, including our dealings with various
theocracies across the globe. I see many reasons to resist this gross intrusion of the
judicial power into foreign affairs.
page 4
Project v. Trump, No. 17-00361-TDC, at 5, 29 (D. Md. Mar. 16, 2017).
Taking a cue from the panel’s opinion and citing a trove of informal and
unofficial statements from the President and his advisers, see Hawaii at 33–37, the
district judge found that plaintiffs had shown “a strong likelihood of succeeding on
their claim” that the new order violates the Establishment Clause, id. at 41. And
why shouldn’t he? After all, the panel made this evidentiary snark hunt the law of
the Ninth Circuit; the district judge was (in his own word) “commanded” to follow
it. Id. at 32.
This is folly. Candidates say many things on the campaign trail; they are
often contradictory or inflammatory.3 No shortage of dark purpose can be found
by sifting through the daily promises of a drowning candidate, when in truth the
poor shlub’s only intention is to get elected. No Supreme Court case—indeed no
case anywhere that I am aware of—sweeps so widely in probing politicians for
3
There is an anecdote, doubtless apocryphal, about Franklin Roosevelt
during a whistlestop tour. He had two speeches that took opposite positions on a
hot-button issue of the day. When the train stopped at a town that favored the
issue, he would give his “pro” speech. And in towns that opposed the issue he’d
give his “con” speech. One day he approached a town that his advisors told him
was divided evenly between the pros and cons. FDR’s advisers worried about how
he’d handle the situation, but FDR was undaunted. He gave a speech and when he
was done the pros in the audience believed he was in their corner and the cons
were convinced he agreed with them. And that, friends, is the nature of electoral
politics.
page 5
unconstitutional motives.4 And why stop with the campaign? Personal histories,
public and private, can become a scavenger hunt for statements that a clever lawyer
can characterize as proof of a -phobia or an -ism, with the prefix depending on the
constitutional challenge of the day.
This path is strewn with danger. It will chill campaign speech, despite the
fact that our most basic free speech principles have their “fullest and most urgent
application precisely to the conduct of campaigns for political office.”
McCutcheon v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 134 S. Ct. 1434, 1441 (2014) (citation and
internal quotation marks omitted). And it will mire us in a swamp of unworkable
litigation. Eager research assistants can discover much in the archives, and those
findings will be dumped on us with no sense of how to weigh them. Does a Meet
the Press interview cancel out an appearance on Face the Nation? Does a year-old
presidential proclamation equal three recent statements from the cabinet? What is
the appropriate place of an overzealous senior thesis or a poorly selected yearbook
quote?
Weighing these imponderables is precisely the kind of “judicial
4
Respect for a coordinate branch should also counsel against focusing on
campaign statements. Candidate Trump, unlike President Trump, had not taken an
oath to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution,” U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl.
8, and was not bound to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed,” id. art. II,
§ 3.
page 6
psychoanalysis” that the Supreme Court has told us to avoid. McCreary County v.
ACLU of Ky., 545 U.S. 844, 862 (2005). The hopelessness of this weighing
exercise is why the Supreme Court has never “deferred to comments made by
[government] officials to the media.” Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, 548 U.S. 557, 623–24
n.52 (2006). And it’s why the panel’s case citations for the supposedly “well
established” proposition that the President’s informal statements are admissible,
upon closer inspection, turn out to refer to a much more limited universe: the text
of city council resolutions, early drafts of legislation, transcripts of legislative
discussions and contemporaneous statements by legislative members. See Church
of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520, 534–35 (1993);
Larson v. Valente, 456 U.S. 228, 254 (1982); Vill. of Arlington Heights v. Metro
Housing Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 268 (1977). Limiting the evidentiary universe
to activities undertaken while crafting an official policy makes for a manageable,
sensible inquiry. But the panel has approved open season on anything a politician
or his staff may have said, so long as a lawyer can argue with a straight face that it
signals an unsavory motive.
Even if a politician’s past statements were utterly clear and consistent, using
them to yield a specific constitutional violation would suggest an absurd
result—namely, that the policies of an elected official can be forever held hostage
page 7
by the unguarded declarations of a candidate. If a court were to find that campaign
skeletons prevented an official from pursuing otherwise constitutional policies,
what could he do to cure the defect? Could he stand up and recant it all (“just
kidding!”) and try again? Or would we also need a court to police the sincerity of
that mea culpa—piercing into the public official’s “heart of hearts” to divine
whether he really changed his mind, just as the Supreme Court has warned us not
to? See McCreary, 545 U.S. at 862.
This is yet another reason my colleagues err by failing to vacate this hasty
opinion. The panel’s unnecessary statements on this subject will shape litigation
near and far.5 We’ll quest aimlessly for true intentions across a sea of insults and
hyperbole. It will be (as it were) a huge, total disaster.
5
Contrary to the claims of Judges Reinhardt and Berzon, the substance of
the panel’s opinion continues to be highly relevant. Because the panel has refused
to vacate it, the opinion continues to be the law of the circuit and is being followed
by courts in the circuit and elsewhere. My criticism bears directly on the mistake
our court has made in failing to vacate the opinion, and will hopefully warn other
courts away from similar errors. My colleagues’ effort to muzzle criticism of an
egregiously wrong panel opinion betrays their insecurity about the opinion’s legal
analysis.
FILED
MAR 17 2017
Washington v. Trump, No. 17-35105
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
BYBEE, Circuit Judge, with whom KOZINSKI, CALLAHAN, BEA, and IKUTA,
Circuit Judges, join, dissenting from the denial of reconsideration en banc.
I regret that we did not decide to reconsider this case en banc for the purpose
of vacating the panel’s opinion. We have an obligation to correct our own errors,
particularly when those errors so confound Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit
precedent that neither we nor our district courts will know what law to apply in the
future.
The Executive Order of January 27, 2017, suspending the entry of certain
aliens, was authorized by statute, and presidents have frequently exercised that
authority through executive orders and presidential proclamations. Whatever we,
as individuals, may feel about the President or the Executive Order,1 the
President’s decision was well within the powers of the presidency, and “[t]he
wisdom of the policy choices made by [the President] is not a matter for our
consideration.” Sale v. Haitian Ctrs. Council, Inc., 509 U.S. 155, 165 (1993).
1
Our personal views are of no consequence. I note this only to emphasize
that I have written this dissent to defend an important constitutional principle—that
the political branches, informed by foreign affairs and national security
considerations, control immigration subject to limited judicial review—and not to
defend the administration’s policy.
This is not to say that presidential immigration policy concerning the entry of
aliens at the border is immune from judicial review, only that our review is limited
by Kleindienst v. Mandel, 408 U.S. 753 (1972)—and the panel held that limitation
inapplicable. I dissent from our failure to correct the panel’s manifest error.
I
In this section I provide background on the source of Congress’s and the
President’s authority to exclude aliens, the Executive Order at issue here, and the
proceedings in this case. The informed reader may proceed directly to Part II.
A
“The exclusion of aliens is a fundamental act of sovereignty.” United States
ex rel. Knauff v. Shaughnessy, 338 U.S. 537, 542 (1950); see also Landon v.
Plasencia, 459 U.S. 21, 32 (1982). Congress has the principal power to control the
nation’s borders, a power that follows naturally from its power “[t]o establish an
uniform rule of Naturalization,” U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 4, and from its authority
to “regulate Commerce with foreign Nations,” id. art. I, § 8, cl. 3, and to “declare
War,” id. art. I, § 8, cl. 11. See Am. Ins. Ass’n v. Garamendi, 539 U.S. 396, 414
(2003); Harisiades v. Shaughnessy, 342 U.S. 580, 588–89 (1952) (“[A]ny policy
toward aliens is vitally and intricately interwoven with contemporaneous policies
in regard to the conduct of foreign relations [and] the war power . . . .”). The
2
President likewise has some constitutional claim to regulate the entry of aliens into
the United States. “Although the source of the President’s power to act in foreign
affairs does not enjoy any textual detail, the historical gloss on the ‘executive
Power’ vested in Article II of the Constitution has recognized the President’s ‘vast
share of responsibility for the conduct of our foreign relations.’” Garamendi, 539
U.S. at 414 (quoting Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579,
610–11 (1952) (Frankfurter, J., concurring)). The foreign policy powers of the
presidency derive from the President’s role as “Commander in Chief,” U.S. Const.
art. II, § 2, cl. 1, his right to “receive Ambassadors and other public Ministers,” id.
art. II, § 3, and his general duty to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed,”
id. See Garamendi, 539 U.S. at 414. The “power of exclusion of aliens is also
inherent in the executive.” Knauff, 338 U.S. at 543.
In the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, Congress exercised its
authority to prescribe the terms on which aliens may be admitted to the United
States, the conditions on which they may remain within our borders, and the
requirements for becoming naturalized U.S. citizens. 8 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq.
Congress also delegated authority to the President to suspend the entry of “any
class of aliens” as he deems appropriate:
Whenever the President finds that the entry of any aliens or of any
3
class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the
interests of the United States, he may by proclamation, and for such
period as he shall deem necessary, suspend the entry of all aliens or
any class of aliens as immigrants or nonimmigrants, or impose on the
entry of aliens any restrictions he may deem to be appropriate.
Id. § 1182(f). Many presidents have invoked the authority of § 1182(f) to bar the
entry of broad classes of aliens from identified countries.2
In Executive Order No. 13769, the President exercised the authority granted
in § 1182(f). Exec. Order No. 13769 § 3(c) (Jan. 27, 2017), revoked by Exec.
Order No. 13780 § 1(i) (Mar. 6, 2017). The Executive Order covered a number of
subjects. Three provisions were particularly relevant to this litigation. First, the
Executive Order found that “the immigrant and nonimmigrant entry into the United
States of aliens from [seven] countries . . . would be detrimental to the interests of
the United States” and ordered the suspension of entry for nationals (with certain
exceptions) from those countries for 90 days. Id. The seven countries were Iran,
Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen. Second, it directed the Secretary
of State to suspend the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP) for 120 days.
2
See, e.g., Exec. Order No. 12324 (Sept. 29, 1981) (Reagan and Haiti);
Proclamation No. 5517 (Aug. 22, 1986) (Reagan and Cuba); Exec. Order No.
12807 (May 24, 1992) (George H.W. Bush and Haiti); Proclamation No. 6958
(Nov. 22, 1996) (Clinton and Sudan); Proclamation No. 7359 (Oct. 10, 2000)
(Clinton and Sierra Leone); Exec. Order No. 13276 (Nov. 15, 2002) (George W.
Bush and Haiti); Exec. Order No. 13692 (Mar. 8, 2015) (Obama and Venezuela);
Exec. Order No. 13726 (Apr. 19, 2016) (Obama and Libya).
4
However, exceptions could be made “on a case-by-case basis” in the discretion of
the Secretaries of State and Homeland Security. Once USRAP resumed, the
Secretary of State was “to prioritize refugee claims made by individuals on the
basis of religious-based persecution, provided that the religion of the individual
[was] a minority religion in the individual’s country of nationality.” Id. § 5(a), (b),
(e). Third, it suspended indefinitely the entry of Syrian refugees. Id. § 5(c).
B
Three days after the President signed the Executive Order, the States of
Washington and Minnesota brought suit in the Western District of Washington
seeking declaratory and injunctive relief on behalf of their universities, businesses,
citizens, and residents that were affected by the Executive Order in various ways.
The States also sought a temporary restraining order (TRO). On February 3, 2017,
following a hearing, the district court, without making findings of fact or
conclusions of law with respect to the merits of the suit, issued a nationwide TRO
against the enforcement of §§ 3(c), 5(a)–(c), (e). The district court proposed
further briefing by the parties and a hearing on the States’ request for a preliminary
injunction.3
3
That same day, the district court for the District of Massachusetts denied a
preliminary injunction to petitioners challenging the Executive Order on equal
protection, Establishment Clause, due process, and APA grounds. Louhghalam v.
5
The United States sought a stay of the district court’s order pending an
appeal. A motions panel of our court, on an expedited basis (including oral
argument by phone involving four time zones), denied the stay. Washington v.
Trump, 847 F.3d 1151 (9th Cir. 2017).
Among other things, the panel drew three critical conclusions. First, the
panel held that, although we owe deference to the political branches, we can review
the Executive Order for constitutionality under the same standards as we would
review challenges to domestic policies. See id. at 1161–64. Second, the panel
found that the States were likely to succeed on their due process arguments
because “the Executive Order [does not] provide[] what due process requires, such
as notice and a hearing prior to restricting an individual’s ability to travel.” Id. at
1164. Third, the panel found that there were at least “significant constitutional
questions” under the Establishment Clause raised by the fact that the seven
countries identified in the Executive Order are principally Muslim countries and
the President, before and after his election, made reference to “a Muslim ban.” Id.
at 1168.
Trump, No. 17-10154-NMG, 2017 WL 479779 (D. Mass. Feb. 3, 2017). The
following week, the district court for the Eastern District of Virginia granted a
preliminary injunction against enforcement of the Executive Order in Virginia.
The court’s sole grounds were based on the Establishment Clause. Aziz v. Trump,
No. 1:17-cv-116 (LMB/TCB), 2017 WL 580855 (E.D. Va. Feb. 13, 2017).
6
In response to the panel’s decision not to stay the district court’s TRO
pending appeal, a judge of our court asked for en banc review. The court invited
the parties to comment on whether the entire court should review the judgment.
The U.S. Department of Justice asked that the panel hold the appeal while the
administration considered the appropriate next steps and vacate the opinion upon
the issuance of any new executive order. A majority of the court agreed to stay the
en banc process. In the end, the President issued a new Executive Order on March
6, 2017, that referred to the panel’s decision and addressed some of the panel’s
concerns. In light of the new Executive Order, the Department of Justice moved to
dismiss the appeal in this case. The panel granted the motion to dismiss but did not
vacate its precedential opinion.4
Ordinarily, when an appeal is dismissed because it has become moot, any
opinions previously issued in the case remain on the books. U.S. Bancorp Mortg.
Co. v. Bonner Mall P’ship, 513 U.S. 18, 26 (1994) (“Judicial precedents are
presumptively correct and valuable to the legal community as a whole. They . . .
should stand unless a court concludes that the public interest would be served by a
4
Proceedings in the original suit filed by Washington and Minnesota are still
pending in the Western District of Washington. The State of Hawaii also filed suit
in the District of Hawaii and has asked for a TRO enjoining the second Executive
Order. See Plaintiffs’ Motion for Temporary Restraining Order, Hawai’i v. Trump,
No. 1:17-cv-00050-DKW-KSC (D. Haw. Mar. 8, 2017), ECF No. 65.
7
vacatur.” (citation omitted)). The court, however, has discretion to vacate its
opinion to “clear[] the path for future relitigation of the issues between the parties,”
United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36, 40 (1950), or where “exceptional
circumstances . . . counsel in favor of such a course,” U.S. Bancorp Mortg., 513
U.S. at 29. We should have exercised that discretion in this case because the panel
made a fundamental error.5 It neglected or overlooked critical cases by the
Supreme Court and by our court making clear that when we are reviewing
decisions about who may be admitted into the United States, we must defer to the
judgment of the political branches.6 That does not mean that we have no power of
judicial review at all, but it does mean that our authority to second guess or to
probe the decisions of those branches is carefully circumscribed. The panel’s
analysis conflicts irreconcilably with our prior cases. We had an obligation to
5
We have previously said that it is procedurally proper for a judge “to seek
an en banc rehearing for the purpose of vacating [a panel’s] decision.” United
States v. Payton, 593 F.3d 881, 886 (9th Cir. 2010).
6
To be clear, the panel made several other legal errors. Its holding that the
States were likely to succeed on the merits of their procedural due process claims
confounds century-old precedent. And its unreasoned assumption that courts
should simply plop Establishment Clause cases from the domestic context over to
the foreign affairs context ignores the realities of our world. But these errors are
not what justified vacatur. Instead, it is the panel’s treatment of Kleindienst v.
Mandel, 408 U.S. 753 (1972), that called for an extraordinary exercise of our
discretion to vacate the panel’s opinion.
8
vacate the panel’s opinion in order to resolve that conflict and to provide consistent
guidance to district courts and future panels of this court.
II
The panel began its analysis from two important premises: first, that it is an
“uncontroversial principle” that we “owe substantial deference to the immigration
and national security policy determinations of the political branches,” Washington,
847 F.3d at 1161; second, that courts can review constitutional challenges to
executive actions, see id. at 1164. I agree with both of these propositions.
Unfortunately, that was both the beginning and the end of the deference the panel
gave the President.
How do we reconcile these two titan principles of constitutional law? It is
indeed an “uncontroversial principle” that courts must defer to the political
judgment of the President and Congress in matters of immigration policy. The
Supreme Court has said so, plainly and often. See, e.g., Mathews v. Diaz, 426 U.S.
67, 81 (1976) (“[T]he responsibility for regulating the relationship between the
United States and our alien visitors has been committed to the political branches of
the Federal Government.”); Harisiades, 342 U.S. at 590 (“[N]othing in the
structure of our Government or the text of our Constitution would warrant judicial
review by standards which would require us to equate our political judgment with
9
that of Congress.”); Shaughnessy v. United States ex rel. Mezei, 345 U.S. 206, 210
(1953) (“Courts have long recognized the power to expel or exclude aliens as a
fundamental sovereign attribute exercised by the Government’s political
departments largely immune from judicial control.”); Henderson v. Mayor of N.Y.,
92 U.S. (2 Otto) 259, 270–71 (1876). On the other hand, it seems equally
fundamental that the judicial branch is a critical backstop to defend the rights of
individuals against the excesses of the political branches. See INS v. Chadha, 462
U.S. 919, 941 (1983) (reviewing Congress’s use of power over aliens to ensure that
“the exercise of that authority does not offend some other constitutional
restriction” (quoting Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 132 (1976))).
The Supreme Court has given us a way to analyze these knotty questions,
but it depends on our ability to distinguish between two groups of aliens: those
who are present within our borders and those who are seeking admission. As the
Court explained in Leng May Ma v. Barber,
It is important to note at the outset that our immigration laws
have long made a distinction between those aliens who have come to
our shores seeking admission, . . . and those who are within the United
States after an entry, irrespective of its legality. In the latter instance
the Court has recognized additional rights and privileges not extended
to those in the former category who are merely “on the threshold of
initial entry.”
357 U.S. 185, 187 (1958) (quoting Mezei, 345 U.S. at 212). The panel did not
10
recognize that critical distinction and it led to manifest error. The panel’s decision
is not only inconsistent with clear Supreme Court authority, but the panel missed a
whole bunch of our own decisions as well.
A
The appropriate test for judging executive and congressional action affecting
aliens who are outside our borders and seeking admission is set forth in Kleindienst
v. Mandel, 408 U.S. 753 (1972). In Mandel, the government had denied a visa to a
Marxist journalist who had been invited to address conferences at Columbia,
Princeton, and Stanford, among other groups. Mandel and American university
professors brought facial and as-applied challenges under the First and Fifth
Amendments. The Court first made clear that Mandel himself, “as an unadmitted
and nonresident alien, had no constitutional right of entry.” Id. at 762. Then it
addressed the First Amendment claims of the professors who had invited him.
Recognizing that “First Amendment rights [were] implicated” in the case, the
Court declined to revisit the principle that the political branches may decide whom
to admit and whom to exclude. Id. at 765. It concluded that when the executive
has exercised its authority to exclude aliens “on the basis of a facially legitimate
and bona fide reason, the courts will neither look behind the exercise of that
discretion, nor test it by balancing its justification against the First Amendment
11
interests of those who seek personal communication with the applicant.” Id. at
770.
In this case, the government argued that Mandel provided the proper
framework for analyzing the States’ claims. The panel, however, tossed Mandel
aside because it involved only a decision by a consular officer, not the President.
See Washington, 847 F.3d at 1162 (“The present case, by contrast, is not about the
application of a specifically enumerated congressional policy to the particular facts
presented in an individual visa application. Rather the States are challenging the
President’s promulgation of sweeping immigration policy.”). Two responses.
First, the panel’s declaration that we cannot look behind the decision of a consular
officer, but can examine the decision of the President stands the separation of
powers on its head. We give deference to a consular officer making an individual
determination, but not the President when making a broad, national security-based
decision? With a moment’s thought, that principle cannot withstand the gentlest
inquiry, and we have said so. See Bustamante v. Mukasey, 531 F.3d 1059, 1062
n.1 (9th Cir. 2008) (“We are unable to distinguish Mandel on the grounds that the
exclusionary decision challenged in that case was not a consular visa denial, but
rather the Attorney General’s refusal to waive Mandel’s inadmissibility. The
holding is plainly stated in terms of the power delegated by Congress to ‘the
12
Executive.’ The Supreme Court said nothing to suggest that the reasoning or
outcome would vary according to which executive officer is exercising the
Congressionally-delegated power to exclude.”). Second, the promulgation of
broad policy is precisely what we expect the political branches to do; Presidents
rarely, if ever, trouble themselves with decisions to admit or exclude individual
visa-seekers. See Knauff, 338 U.S. at 543 (“[B]ecause the power of exclusion of
aliens is also inherent in the executive department of the sovereign, Congress may
in broad terms authorize the executive to exercise the power . . . for the best
interests of the country during a time of national emergency.”). If the panel is
correct, it just wiped out any principle of deference to the executive.
Worse, the panel’s decision missed entirely Fiallo v. Bell, 430 U.S. 787
(1977), and Fiallo answers the panel’s reasons for brushing off Mandel. In Fiallo,
the plaintiff brought a facial due process challenge to immigration laws giving
preferential treatment to natural mothers of illegitimate children. As in Mandel,
the constitutional challenge in Fiallo was “based on [the] constitutional rights of
citizens.” Id. at 795. The Court acknowledged that the challenge invoked
“‘double-barreled’ discrimination based on sex and illegitimacy.” Id. at 794.
Either ground, if brought in a suit in a domestic context, would have invoked some
kind of heightened scrutiny. See Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190, 197 (1976) (sex
13
discrimination); Trimble v. Gordon, 430 U.S. 762, 769 (1977) (illegitimacy).
Rejecting the claim that “the Government’s power in this area is never subject to
judicial review,” Fiallo, 430 U.S. at 795–96, 795 n.6, the Court held that Mandel’s
“facially legitimate and bona fide reason” test was the proper standard: “We can
see no reason to review the broad congressional policy choice at issue here under a
more exacting standard than was applied in Kleindienst v. Mandel, a First
Amendment case.” Id. at 795; see also id. at 794 (rejecting “the suggestion that
more searching judicial scrutiny is required”). Importantly, the Court reached that
conclusion despite the fact the immigration laws at issue promulgated “sweeping
immigration policy,” Washington, 847 F.3d at 1162, just as the Executive Order
did.
The panel’s holding that “exercises of policymaking authority at the highest
levels of the political branches are plainly not subject to the Mandel standard,” id.,
is simply irreconcilable with the Supreme Court’s holding that it could “see no
reason to review the broad congressional policy choice at issue [there] under a
more exacting standard than was applied in Kleindienst v. Mandel,” Fiallo, 430
U.S. at 795.
Fiallo wasn’t the only Supreme Court case applying Mandel that the panel
missed. In Kerry v. Din, 135 S. Ct. 2128 (2015), the Court confronted a case in
14
which Din (a U.S. citizen) claimed that the government’s refusal to grant her
Afghani husband a visa violated her own constitutional right to live with her
husband. A plurality held that Din had no such constitutional right. Id. at 2131
(plurality opinion). Justice Kennedy, joined by Justice Alito, concurred in the
judgment, and we have held that his opinion is controlling. Cardenas v. United
States, 826 F.3d 1164, 1171 (9th Cir. 2016). For purposes of the case, Justice
Kennedy assumed that Din had a protected liberty interest, but he rejected her
claim to additional procedural due process. “The conclusion that Din received all
the process to which she was entitled finds its most substantial instruction in the
Court’s decision in Kleindienst v. Mandel.” Din, 135 S. Ct. at 2139 (Kennedy, J.,
concurring in the judgment) (citation omitted). After reciting Mandel’s facts and
holding, Justice Kennedy concluded that “[t]he reasoning and the holding in
Mandel control here. That decision was based upon due consideration of the
congressional power to make rules for the exclusion of aliens, and the ensuing
power to delegate authority to the Attorney General to exercise substantial
discretion in that field.” Id. at 2140. Once the executive makes a decision “on the
basis of a facially legitimate and bona fide reason,” the courts may “‘neither look
behind the exercise of that discretion, nor test it by balancing its justification
against’ the constitutional interests of citizens the visa denial might implicate.” Id.
15
(quoting Mandel, 408 U.S. at 770). Applying Mandel, Justice Kennedy concluded
that “the Government satisfied any obligation it might have had to provide Din
with a facially legitimate and bona fide reason for its action when it provided
notice that her husband was denied admission to the country under [8 U.S.C.] §
1182(a)(3)(B).” Id. at 2141. No more was required, and “[b]y requiring the
Government to provide more, the [Ninth Circuit] erred in adjudicating Din’s
constitutional claims.” Id.
The importance and continuing applicability of the framework set out in
Mandel and applied in Fiallo and Din has been recognized in circumstances
remarkably similar to the Executive Order. After the attacks of September 11,
2001, the Attorney General instituted the National Security Entry-Exit Registration
System. That program required non-immigrant alien males (residing in the United
States) over the age of sixteen from twenty-five countries—twenty-four Muslim-
majority countries plus North Korea—to appear for registration and fingerprinting.
One court referred to the program as “enhanced monitoring.” See Rajah v.
Mukasey, 544 F.3d 427, 433–34, 439 (2d Cir. 2008) (describing the program).7
The aliens subject to the program filed a series of suits in federal courts across the
7
The aliens subject to the program were designated by country in a series of
notices. The first notice covered five countries: Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan, and
Syria. See Rajah, 544 F.3d at 433 n.3.
16
United States. They contended that the program unconstitutionally discriminated
against them on the basis of “their religion, ethnicity, gender, and race.” Id. at 438.
Similar to the claims here, the petitioners argued that the program “was motivated
by an improper animus toward Muslims.” Id. at 439.
Citing Fiallo and applying the Mandel test, the Second Circuit held that
“[t]he most exacting level of scrutiny that we will impose on immigration
legislation is rational basis review.” Id. at 438 (alteration in original) (citation
omitted). The court then found “a facially legitimate and bona fide reason for” the
registration requirements because the countries were “selected on the basis of
national security criteria.” Id. at 438–39. The court rejected as having “no basis”
the petitioners’ claim of religious animus. Id. at 439. The court observed that “one
major threat of terrorist attacks comes from radical Islamic groups.” Id. It added:
Muslims from non-specified countries were not subject to registration.
Aliens from the designated countries who were qualified to be
permanent residents in the United States were exempted whether or
not they were Muslims. The program did not target only Muslims:
non-Muslims from the designated countries were subject to
registration.
Id. Finally, the court refused to review the program for “its effectiveness and
wisdom” because the court “ha[d] no way of knowing whether the Program’s
enhanced monitoring of aliens ha[d] disrupted or deterred attacks. In any event,
17
such a consideration [was] irrelevant because an ex ante rather than ex post
assessment of the Program [was] required under the rational basis test.” Id. The
Second Circuit thus unanimously rejected the petitioners’ constitutional challenges
and “join[ed] every circuit that ha[d] considered the issue in concluding that the
Program [did] not violate Equal Protection guarantees.” Id.; see Malik v. Gonzales,
213 F. App’x 173, 174–75 (4th Cir. 2007); Kandamar v. Gonzales, 464 F.3d 65,
72–74 (1st Cir. 2006); Zafar v. U.S. Attorney Gen., 461 F.3d 1357, 1367 (11th Cir.
2006); Hadayat v. Gonzales, 458 F.3d 659, 664–65 (7th Cir. 2006); Shaybob v.
Attorney Gen., 189 F. App’x 127, 130 (3d Cir. 2006); Ahmed v. Gonzales, 447
F.3d 433, 439 (5th Cir. 2006); see also Adenwala v. Holder, 341 F. App’x 307, 309
(9th Cir. 2009); Roudnahal v. Ridge, 310 F. Supp. 2d 884, 892 (N.D. Ohio 2003).
The panel was oblivious to this important history.
The combination of Mandel, Fiallo, and Din, and the history of their
application to the post-9/11 registration program, is devastating to the panel’s
conclusion that we can simply apply ordinary constitutional standards to
immigration policy. Compounding its omission, the panel missed all of our own
cases applying Mandel to constitutional challenges to immigration decisions. See,
e.g., Cardenas, 826 F.3d at 1171 (discussing Mandel and Din extensively as the
“standard of judicial review applicable to the visa denial” where petitioner alleged
18
due process and equal protection violations); An Na Peng v. Holder, 673 F.3d
1248, 1258 (9th Cir. 2012) (applying the Mandel standard to reject a lawful
permanent resident’s equal protection challenge against a broad policy);
Bustamante, 531 F.3d at 1060 (applying Mandel to a due process claim and
describing Mandel as “a highly constrained review”); Padilla-Padilla v. Gonzales,
463 F.3d 972, 978–79 (9th Cir. 2006) (applying Mandel to a due process challenge
to the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996);
Nadarajah v. Gonzales, 443 F.3d 1069, 1082 (9th Cir. 2006) (using the Mandel
standard to address an alien’s challenge to the executive’s denial of parole to
temporarily enter the United States, and finding the executive’s reasons “were not
facially legitimate and bona fide”); Barthelemy v. Ashcroft, 329 F.3d 1062, 1065
(9th Cir. 2003) (applying Fiallo to a facial equal protection challenge based on
“former marital status”); Noh v. INS, 248 F.3d 938, 942 (9th Cir. 2001) (applying
Mandel when an alien challenged the revocation of his visa); see also Andrade-
Garcia v. Lynch, 828 F.3d 829, 834–35 (9th Cir. 2016) (discussing review under
Mandel). Like the Second Circuit in Rajah, we too have repeatedly “equated [the
Mandel] standard of review with rational basis review.” Barthelemy, 329 F.3d at
1065; see An Na Peng, 673 F.3d at 1258; Ablang v. Reno, 52 F.3d 801, 805 (9th
Cir. 1995). It is equally clear from our cases that we apply Mandel whether we are
19
dealing with an individual determination by the Attorney General or a consular
officer, as in Mandel and Din, or with broad policy determinations, as in Fiallo.
The panel’s clear misstatement of law justifies vacating the opinion.
B
Applying Mandel here, the panel’s error becomes obvious: the Executive
Order was easily “facially legitimate” and supported by a “bona fide reason.” As I
have quoted above, § 1182(f) authorizes the President to suspend the entry of “any
class of aliens” as he deems appropriate:
Whenever the President finds that the entry of any aliens or of any
class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the
interests of the United States, he may by proclamation, and for such
period as he shall deem necessary, suspend the entry of all aliens or
any class of aliens as immigrants or nonimmigrants, or impose on the
entry of aliens any restrictions he may deem to be appropriate.
8 U.S.C. § 1182(f).8 Invoking this authority and making the requisite findings, the
President “proclaim[ed] that the immigrant and nonimmigrant entry into the United
States of aliens from [seven] countries . . . would be detrimental to the interests of
8
Regrettably, the panel never once mentioned § 1182(f), nor did it
acknowledge that when acting pursuant it to it, the government’s “authority is at its
maximum, for it includes all that [the President] possesses in his own right plus all
the Congress can delegate.” Youngstown, 343 U.S. at 635 (Jackson, J.,
concurring); see Knauff, 338 U.S. at 542 (“When Congress prescribes a procedure
concerning the admissibility of aliens, it is not dealing alone with a legislative
power. It is implementing an inherent executive power.”).
20
the United States,” and he suspended their entry for 90 days. Exec. Order No.
13769 § 3(c). As the Executive Order further noted, the seven countries—Iraq,
Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen—had all been previously identified
by either Congress, the Secretary of State, or the Secretary of Homeland Security
(all in prior administrations) as “countries or areas of concern” because of terrorist
activity.9 The President noted that we “must be vigilant” in light of “deteriorating
conditions in certain countries due to war, strife, disaster, and civil unrest.” Id. § 1.
The President’s actions might have been more aggressive than those of his
predecessors, but that was his prerogative. Thus, the President’s actions were
supported by a “facially legitimate and bona fide” reason.
Justice Kennedy indicated in Din that it might have been appropriate to
“look behind” the government’s exclusion of Din’s husband if there were “an
affirmative showing of bad faith on the part of the consular officer who denied [the
9
Iraq and Syria: Congress has disqualified nationals or persons who have
been present in Iraq and Syria from eligibility for the Visas Waiver Program. 8
U.S.C. § 1187(a)(12)(A)(i)(I), (ii)(I).
Iran, Sudan, and Syria: Under § 1187(a)(12)(A)(i)(II), (ii)(II), the Secretary
of State has designated Iran, Sudan, and Syria as state sponsors of terrorism
because the “government . . . repeatedly provided support of acts of international
terrorism.”
Libya, Somalia, and Yemen: Similarly, under § 1187(a)(12)(A)(i)(III),
(ii)(III), the Secretary of Homeland Security has designated Libya, Somalia, and
Yemen as countries where a foreign terrorist organization has a significant
presence in the country or where the country is a safe haven for terrorists.
21
husband’s] visa.” Din, 135 S. Ct. at 2141 (Kennedy, J., concurring in the
judgment). Because the panel never discussed Din, let alone claimed that Justice
Kennedy’s comment might allow us to peek behind the facial legitimacy of the
Executive Order, I need not address the argument in detail. Suffice it to say, it
would be a huge leap to suggest that Din’s “bad faith” exception also applies to the
motives of broad-policy makers as opposed to those of consular officers.
Even if we have questions about the basis for the President’s ultimate
findings—whether it was a “Muslim ban” or something else—we do not get to
peek behind the curtain. So long as there is one “facially legitimate and bona fide”
reason for the President’s actions, our inquiry is at an end. As the Court explained
in Reno v. American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, 525 U.S. 471 (1999):
The Executive should not have to disclose its “real” reasons for
deeming nationals of a particular country a special threat—or indeed
for simply wishing to antagonize a particular foreign country by
focusing on that country’s nationals—and even it if did disclose them
a court would be ill equipped to determine their authenticity and
utterly unable to assess their adequacy.
Id. at 491; see Mezei, 345 U.S. at 210–12; Knauff, 338 U.S. at 543.
The panel faulted the government for not coming forward in support of the
Executive Order with evidence—including “classified information.” Washington,
847 F.3d at 1168 & nn.7–8. First, that is precisely what the Court has told us we
22
should not do. Once the facial legitimacy is established, we may not “look behind
the exercise of that discretion.” Fiallo, 430 U.S. at 795–96 (quoting Mandel, 408
U.S. at 770). The government may provide more details “when it sees fit” or if
Congress “requir[es] it to do so,” but we may not require it. Din, 135 S. Ct. at
2141 (Kennedy, J., concurring in the judgment). Second, that we have the capacity
to hold the confidences of the executive’s secrets does not give us the right to
examine them, even under the most careful conditions. As Justice Kennedy wrote
in Din, “in light of the national security concerns the terrorism bar addresses[,] . . .
even if . . . sensitive facts could be reviewed by courts in camera, the dangers and
difficulties of handling such delicate security material further counsel against
requiring disclosure.” Id.; see Chi. & S. Air Lines v. Waterman S.S. Corp., 333
U.S. 103, 111 (1948) (“It would be intolerable that courts, without the relevant
information, should review and perhaps nullify actions of the Executive taken on
information properly held secret. Nor can courts sit in camera in order to be taken
into executive confidences.”). When we apply the correct standard of review, the
President does not have to come forward with supporting documentation to explain
the basis for the Executive Order.
The panel’s errors are many and obvious. Had it applied the proper
standard, the panel should have stopped here and issued the stay of the district
23
court’s TRO. Instead, the panel opinion stands contrary to well-established
separation-of-powers principles. We have honored those principles in our prior
decisions; the panel failed to observe them here. If for no other reason, we should
have gone en banc to vacate the panel’s opinion in order to keep our own decisions
straight.
III
We are all acutely aware of the enormous controversy and chaos that
attended the issuance of the Executive Order. People contested the extent of the
national security interests at stake, and they debated the value that the Executive
Order added to our security against the real suffering of potential emigres. As
tempting as it is to use the judicial power to balance those competing interests as
we see fit, we cannot let our personal inclinations get ahead of important,
overarching principles about who gets to make decisions in our democracy. For
better or worse, every four years we hold a contested presidential election. We
have all found ourselves disappointed with the election results in one election cycle
or another. But it is the best of American traditions that we also understand and
respect the consequences of our elections. Even when we disagree with the
judgment of the political branches—and perhaps especially when we disagree—we
have to trust that the wisdom of the nation as a whole will prevail in the end.
24
Above all, in a democracy, we have the duty to preserve the liberty of the
people by keeping the enormous powers of the national government separated. We
are judges, not Platonic Guardians. It is our duty to say what the law is, and the
meta-source of our law, the U.S. Constitution, commits the power to make foreign
policy, including the decisions to permit or forbid entry into the United States, to
the President and Congress. We will yet regret not having taken this case en banc
to keep those lines of authority straight.
Finally, I wish to comment on the public discourse that has surrounded these
proceedings. The panel addressed the government’s request for a stay under the
worst conditions imaginable, including extraordinarily compressed briefing and
argument schedules and the most intense public scrutiny of our court that I can
remember. Even as I dissent from our decision not to vacate the panel’s flawed
opinion, I have the greatest respect for my colleagues. The personal attacks on the
distinguished district judge and our colleagues were out of all bounds of civic and
persuasive discourse—particularly when they came from the parties. It does no
credit to the arguments of the parties to impugn the motives or the competence of
the members of this court; ad hominem attacks are not a substitute for effective
advocacy. Such personal attacks treat the court as though it were merely a political
forum in which bargaining, compromise, and even intimidation are acceptable
25
principles. The courts of law must be more than that, or we are not governed by
law at all.
I dissent, respectfully.
26
FILED
MAR 17 2017
Washington v. Trump, No. 17-35105 MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
BEA, Circuit Judge, with whom KOZINSKI, CALLAHAN, and IKUTA, Circuit
Judges, join, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc:
I join Judge Bybee’s excellent dissent from the denial of rehearing en banc. I
write separately to emphasize a serious error in the panel’s conclusion that the due
process claims advanced by Washington and Minnesota (collectively, “the States”)
were likely to succeed on the merits. States may not sue the federal government to
assert due process rights for themselves, nor for their residents—much less non-
resident aliens—under the Fifth Amendment, because the States are not proper
party plaintiffs. 1 We should have taken this case en banc to correct this error in the
panel’s due process holding and the several errors identified by Judge Bybee in his
dissent.
The States are not proper party plaintiffs to make claims under the Due
Process Clause, because they are simply not “persons” protected by the Fifth
Amendment. 2 See South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301, 323–24 (1966)
1
The panel denied the government’s motion for a stay solely on due process
grounds. Washington v. Trump, 847 F.3d 1151, 1164 (9th Cir. 2017). It specifically
avoided deciding the First Amendment claim based on religious discrimination.
2
I agree with the panel that the States have alleged proprietary harms to their
public universities sufficient to establish Article III standing. The universities have
spent money for procurement of visas for scholars, faculty, and students, which
expenditures will be wasted if the visa holders are prevented from attendance at the
state schools. What the States have not done, however, is establish that they have
rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to vindicate those
proprietary harms.
1
(“The word ‘person’ in the context of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment cannot, by any reasonable mode of interpretation, be expanded to
encompass the States of the Union, and to our knowledge this has never been done
by any court.”); 3 United States v. Thoms, 684 F.3d 893, 899 n.4 (9th Cir. 2012)
(quoting Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 323); Premo v. Martin, 119 F.3d 764, 771 (9th
Cir. 1997) (“Because the State is not a ‘person’ for the purposes of the Fifth
Amendment, the State’s reliance on the Due Process Clause was misplaced.”
(citing Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 323–24)).
Perhaps to avoid this pitfall, the panel goes one step further. It holds that,
“[u]nder the ‘third party standing’ doctrine, [the] injuries to the state universities
give the States standing to assert the rights of the students, scholars, and faculty
affected by the Executive Order.” Washington, 847 F.3d at 1160. In taking this
step, the panel ignores direct, on-point Supreme Court precedent to the contrary.
3
In Katzenbach, South Carolina sought “a declaration that selected provisions of
the Voting Rights Act of 1965 violate the Federal Constitution,” and “an injunction
against enforcement of [those] provisions by the Attorney General.” Katzenbach,
383 U.S. at 307. South Carolina filed its case directly in the Supreme Court, which
had original jurisdiction to hear the case. Id. The Court denied South Carolina’s
request to enjoin the enforcement of the Voting Rights Act. In its response to South
Carolina’s claim that the Voting Rights Act denied South Carolina due process, the
Court held that states may not bring due process claims under the Fifth
Amendment because states are not persons protected by the Fifth Amendment. Id.
at 323–24.
2
The States may not sue the federal government as parens patriae to protect
their citizens from constitutional violations alleged to have been committed by the
federal government. See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 324 (“Nor does a State have
standing as the parent of its citizens to invoke these constitutional provisions
against the Federal Government, the ultimate parens patriae of every American
citizen.”); Massachusetts v. Mellon, 262 U.S. 447, 485–86 (1923) (“While the
state, under some circumstances, may sue in that capacity for the protection of its
citizens, it is no part of its duty or power to enforce their rights in respect of their
relations with the federal government. In that field it is the United States, and not
the state, which represents them as parens patriae, when such representation
becomes appropriate; and to the former, and not to the latter, they must look for
such protective measures as flow from that status.” (citing Missouri v. Illinois, 180
U.S. 208, 241 (1901))); see also Erwin Chemerinsky, Federal Jurisdiction 123 (7th
ed. 2016) (“One important limit on parens patriae standing of state and local
governments is that they may not sue the federal government in this capacity,
though they may sue the federal government to protect their own sovereign or
proprietary interests.”).
3
The panel avoids this precedent, and holds that the States may sue the
federal government on behalf of their residents’ (and potential future residents’) 4
constitutional interests under the Fifth Amendment because the States have third-
party standing to do so. 5 None of the precedent cited by the panel supports its
4
The panel holds that the States may assert “potential claims regarding possible due
process rights of other persons,” including “[visa] applicants who have a relationship
with a U.S. resident or an institution that might have rights of its own to assert.”
Washington, 847 F.3d at 1166. The Supreme Court has already explained that the
States have no rights of their own to assert under the Fifth Amendment, and have no
basis for asserting the Fifth Amendment due process rights of their residents. In light
of that precedent, I see no reason why the States would be permitted to assert due
process claims on behalf of foreign individuals who have not yet received a visa, and
who do not yet reside in the States that wish to assert claims on the individuals’
behalves. The panel also does not explain what procedures as to notice (reason for
denial) or due process hearing (proof of reasons) the federal government would need
to provide non-resident visa applicants to satisfy due process upon the denial or
suspension of entry pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1182(f). Suppose, for example, an Iranian
national applies for a non-immigrant tourist visa on April 1, and hostilities break out
between the United States and Iran on April 10, one day before the Iranian national
expected to receive a visa. Is the Iranian national entitled to notice that his visa will
not be issued because of the outbreak of hostilities and to a hearing to justify that the
government’s denial does not violate the Iranian national’s due process rights?
Before whom would that hearing be held, where would it take place, and what would
be the required proof? Could the Iranian national file suit in a federal district court
to assert his “possible” due process rights? The panel invites litigation by visa
applicants and other non-resident foreign nationals to assert “potential claims
regarding possible due process rights.” Id. But, as Judge Bybee shows with
precision, no alien has a right to enter the United States; it is a privilege which can
be withheld. See Landon v. Plasencia, 459 U.S. 21, 32 (1982) (“This Court has long
held that an alien seeking initial admission to the United States requests a privilege
and has no constitutional rights regarding his application, for the power to admit or
exclude aliens is a sovereign prerogative.”).
5
The States did not raise third-party standing as a basis to assert the due process
rights of their residents. Instead, the States argued that, as parens patriae, they may
bring due process claims on behalf of their residents (and potential future
4
assertion—which, by the way, was never advanced by the States in their complaint,
their response to the federal government’s emergency motion, or during oral
argument—that a state can evade the strictures of Katzenbach and Mellon through
residents), citing Mellon, 262 U.S. at 481–82, 485 (1923), Alfred L. Snapp & Son,
Inc. v. Puerto Rico, 458 U.S. 592, 609 (1982), and Massachusetts v. EPA, 549 U.S.
497, 516–21, 520 n.17 (2007). Not so. Although Mellon cites Missouri v. Holland,
252 U.S. 416 (1920), for the proposition that a state may sue the federal
government to protect its own quasi-sovereign interests, such as the right of a state
to regulate the taking of wild game within its borders, Mellon, 262 U.S. at 482,
Mellon also made clear that “it is no part of [a state’s] duty or power to enforce [its
citizens’] rights in respect of their relations with the federal government.” Id. at
485–86. In Snapp, Puerto Rico sued private individuals and companies engaged in
the apple industry in Virginia, alleging that those individuals and companies
violated federal statutes when they allegedly discriminated against qualified Puerto
Rican farmworkers. The Fourth Circuit held that Puerto Rico, as parens patriae,
could maintain its suit against the private defendants. The Supreme Court affirmed,
and held that Puerto Rico could sue “to secure the federally created interests of its
residents against private defendants,” but also noted that states lack “standing as
parens patriae to bring an action against the Federal Government.” Snapp, 458
U.S. 592, 610 n.16 (emphasis added). Finally, in Massachusetts v. EPA, the
Supreme Court held that Massachusetts alleged facts sufficient to establish
standing—not to assert constitutional rights on behalf of its residents, but to assert
a statutory right on behalf of the state’s own quasi-sovereign interests—to sue the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Massachusetts, 549 U.S. at 517–21. The
Court held that the state was entitled to “special solicitude” in the standing analysis
because Congress accorded the states a procedural right to challenge agency action
unlawfully withheld, and because the state owned much of the territory alleged to
be affected by the EPA’s withholding of agency action. Id. at 520. Here, neither
the States nor the panel cite any congressional authorization for the States to bring
their claims. None of the cases cited by the States or the panel supports a theory
that a state, as parens patriae, may sue the federal government to assert the due
process rights of its residents. The panel’s uninvited leap to third-party standing
completely avoids the precedents actually cited by the States, which more directly
address the question whether states can sue the federal government to assert
constitutional claims on behalf of their residents. The answer to that question is
“No.”
5
third-party standing doctrine. A closer look at third-party standing doctrine reveals
just the opposite. See Kowalski v. Tesmer, 543 U.S. 125, 129–30 (2004) (“[T]here
may be circumstances where it is necessary to grant a third party standing to assert
the rights of another. But we have limited this exception by requiring a party
seeking third-party standing make two additional showings. First, we have asked
whether the party asserting the right has a ‘close’ relationship with the person who
possesses the right. Second, we have considered whether there is a ‘hindrance’ to
the possessor’s ability to protect his own interests.” (quoting Powers v. Ohio, 499
U.S. 400, 411 (1991)). Even if we assume a close relationship between the States’
universities and their students, faculty, and scholars, the panel—and more
importantly, the States—have not identified any hindrance to first parties’ “ability
to protect [their] own interests” here. Id.; see also Louhghalam v. Trump, ___ F.
Supp. 3d ___, 2017 WL 479779 (D. Mass. Feb. 3, 2017) (reviewing constitutional
claims arising from Executive Order 13769 brought by Iranian nationals who are
employed as Associate Professors at the University of Massachusetts–Dartmouth).
The panel’s conclusion that the States may assert the due process rights of their
residents (or potential future residents) under third-party standing doctrine renders
Katzenbach and Mellon meaningless.
To the lay person, our discussion of third-party standing doctrine may seem
pedantic and without recognition of the harm that could have resulted from the
6
grant of the federal government’s motion to stay the temporary restraining order
pending appeal. The important point is this: The States may not sue the federal
government, either on their own behalf or on behalf of their citizens, to protect
their residents’ due process rights under the Fifth Amendment. Much less do the
States have third-party standing as to non-resident aliens seeking entry into the
country. Therefore, the panel erred when it concluded that the federal government
did not establish a likelihood of success on the merits of the States’ due process
claims—the only claims fully addressed by the panel.
As the district court stated, but unfortunately failed adequately to apply in
his temporary restraining order, “The work of the court is not to create policy or
judge the wisdom of any particular policy promoted by the other two branches.
That is the work of the legislative and executive branches and of the citizens of this
country who ultimately exercise democratic control over those branches. The work
of the Judiciary, and this court, is limited to ensuring that the actions taken by the
other two branches comport with our country’s laws, and more importantly, our
Constitution.” Washington v. Trump, No. C17-0141-JLR, 2017 WL 462040, at *3
(W.D. Wash. Feb. 3, 2017). At a minimum, the federal government established a
likelihood of success on the merits that Executive Order 13769 comports with our
country’s laws and our Constitution. The government’s motion for a stay of the
temporary restraining order should have been granted. Our court should have
7
avoided the inclination to rule based on the political headwinds of a particular
moment in history and taken this case en banc to correct the panel’s significant
errors.
8