Supreme Court

SCOTUS Will Hear Objections To Trump's Travel Ban

The Supreme Court will finally decide whether President Trump's efforts to block travel from six Muslim-majority countries are legal.

SCOTUS Will Hear Objections To Trump's Travel Ban
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The latest version of President Trump's controversial travel ban is finally getting its day in court.

The Supreme Court said Friday it will hear a legal challenge to the Trump administration's policy restricting travel to the U.S. from six Muslim-majority countries. The policy's opponents say it's illegally discriminatory against religion.

The administration's current policy actually applies to eight nations: Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Chad and North Korea, as well as some Venezuelan groups. The legal challenge doesn't apply to the North Korean and Venezuelan portions of the policy.

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This is the third iteration of the so-called travel ban; similar orders from the administration also faced legal challenges, but ultimately ended up expiring or being replaced before SCOTUS could hear those challenges. 

In what could be a good sign for the Trump administration, back in December, the Supreme Court allowed the government to uphold the ban while it deliberated the issue.