Pence Does Damage Control After Trump’s Embarrassing Judicial Setbacks
Pence Does Damage Control After Trump’s Embarrassing Judicial Setbacks · The Fiscal Times

The administration on Sunday attempted to put a positive face on a weekend of embarrassing judicial setbacks that at least temporarily put President Donald Trump’s controversial immigration ban on hold after a week of global protests of Trump’s hard hitting and disruptive executive orders.

Vice President Mike Pence -- the administration’s chief tactician for damage control – appeared on four major talk shows today arguing that a federal court judge’s ruling on Friday night against Trump’s hastily implemented actions against tens of thousands of foreign travelers would soon be reversed.

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Pence insisted that a majority of Americans overwhelmingly approve Trump’s tough action to root out potential terrorists – despite criticism that the order has created chaos and uncertainty at airports throughout the world and is a blot on the country’s tradition of welcoming immigrants of all religions, including Muslims.

“We believe the judge made the wrong decision,” Pence said on Fox News Sunday. “We’re going to continue to use all legal means at our disposal to sustain that order and move forward and take the steps necessary to protect our country.”

Noting that there is no unanimity among lower court judges on the constitutionality of Trump immigration order, Pence added, “We don’t appoint judges to our district courts to conduct foreign policy or to make decisions about our national security.”

“From the very outset of his campaign for president and the outset of his administration, President Trump has made clear he’s going to put the security of the American people first,” Pence added.It is quite clear that the President has the ability to determine who has access to this country when it comes to national security.

Trump fumed and lashed out this weekend after a federal judge in Seattle late Friday ordered a nationwide halt to enforcement of Trump’s week-old order temporarily barring citizens from seven predominantly Muslim countries – including Syria, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen – pending an extensive review of U.S. immigration policies.

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The bellicose chief executive derisively referred to the judge as a “so-called judge” in a tweet and denounced his ruling as “ridiculous” and contrary to the nation’s best interest. His tweets were reminiscent of Trump’s attacks last year on Gonzalo Curiel, a federal district judge in California of Mexican descent who was hearing a fraud case brought against the now-defunct Trump University.