Washington DC:
In a great relief for Indian students and professionals who live in the United States on Visa and awaiting green maps, a federal court in Seattle has blocked the executive Order of President Donald Trump for an indefinite period of time that a termination of the citizenship of birthright wants to end. The court reportedly said that Trump is trying to save the rule of law to play “policy games” with the constitution.
The preliminary order of the American district John Coughenour is the second major legal battle for Trump's efforts to change American law as part of a broader immigration trail after a federal court in Maryland had given a similar ruling.
“It has become more and more clear that the rule of law is only an obstacle to his policy goals for our president. According to him, the rule of law is something to navigate or just ignore, whether for political or personal gain,” said Judge Coughenour During a hearing on Thursday in Seattle, according to a report from DailyExpertNews.
“In this courtroom and under my watch, the rule of law is a clear beacon that I intend to follow,” Coughenour continued.
The judge noted that the Constitution is not something that the government can play policy games. “If the government wants to change the exceptional American granting of the citizenship of birthright, it must change the Constitution itself,” he emphasized.
The new national provisional order issued in Seattle is expanding an earlier short -term block that Coughenour has spent against the president's order after he signed it. It came a day after the American district judge Deborah Boardman in Maryland had given a provisional order against the order of Trump on Wednesday.
Both orders apply nationally and will remain in force while the case is progressing. The Ministry of Justice said at the end of Thursday that it was an appeal to the order of the Seattle court. The appeal of the provisional order is said to be to the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, a left -loving court of appeal, a movement that could eventually get the issue for the American Supreme Court.
How does Trump's order influence Indians in America?
Shortly after taking the second time on January 20, Trump signed an executive order that ended the citizenship of the birthright in the United States. The order denies the American citizenship to children born on American soil to parents who are not permanent inhabitants of the United States.
The order caused concern among the Indian community in the US, in particular those in temporary visas such as H-1B (Werkvisa), L (Intra-Company transfers), H-4 (dependent visas) and F (Studentvisa). According to the orders of Trump, children who were born to parents on temporary visas would not receive citizenship, unless an older was an American citizen or a green card holder.
Without the right to the citizenship of birthright, children of these immigrants run the risk of losing access to tuition rates, federal financial aid and fairs, which significantly influences their educational outlook. The order ensured that many expectant Indian parents rushed for pre-term deliveries before 20 February-the Deadline to order Trump.
The command of Trump also brought fears for immigrants caught in the backlogs of green card, because their children born outside of America can be forced to interpret themselves when they turn 21 unless they secure another visa.