Is Donald Trump trying to throw his own Supreme Court case? One wonders after an astonishing series of early Monday-morning tweets. He insisted on calling his executive order restricting travel from six majority-Muslim countries a "travel ban," denounced his own Department of Justice for watering down the original order and — incredibly — called for strengthening the ban, presumably after the court has upheld the revised order.
All four tweets strengthen the case for blocking the order as unconstitutional. Taken together, they're a nightmare for the office of the solicitor general that must represent the president in court. Short of actually saying that the point of the order was to express anti-Muslim animus, there's not much Trump could have done to weaken his case more.
Trump began by contradicting his lawyers and insulting the judiciary: "The lawyers and the courts can call it whatever they want," he said. But he would call the order "what we need and what it is — A TRAVEL BAN."
This is problematic on multiple levels.
First, there's the tone of contempt for the legal process itself. The lawyers in question are Trump's: The opposition is only too happy to call the order a travel ban. When you insult your own lawyers, the rest of the legal system tends to notice.
As for insulting the lower court judges who have treated the order as a travel ban, that's practically begging the Supreme Court to vindicate those judges. Even Justice Neil Gorsuch, during his confirmation process, suggested that attacks on the judiciary trouble judges. The rest of the justices, who owe Trump nothing — well, you can almost hear Justice Elena Kagan making a deadly serious joke in oral argument, asking some hapless attorney from the solicitor general's office whether she should be calling the order a travel ban, as the president tweeted, or an executive order, as the lawyers have put it.
Of course, the legal briefs that Trump's administration has filed don't call the order a travel ban. There's a reason: A travel ban is at this point really difficult, not to say impossible, to defend in court.
A travel ban sounds a lot like a Muslim ban — which is what the original ban was popularly called and what gave rise to multiple courts' conclusions that the order was motivated not by national security but by unconstitutional anti-Muslim prejudice.