HW
Spokesman says the “BAN” isn’t a “BAN”
Spicer: Trump executive order 'not a
travel ban'
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President Trump’s top
spokesman on Tuesday said his executive order blocking entry of refugees and
travelers from seven predominantly Muslim countries is not a “travel ban,” even
though the president himself called it a “ban.”
White House press
secretary Sean Spicer blamed the media for casting the controversial policy as
a “travel ban.”
“It's not a Muslim
ban. It's not a travel ban,” Spicer told reporters. “It's a vetting system to
keep America safe.”
Spicer’s comments drew
a flurry of questions from reporters, who pointed to a number of instances in
which Trump called it a “ban.”
“If the ban were
announced with a one week notice, the ‘bad’ would rush into our country during
that week. A lot of bad ‘dudes’ out there!” Trump tweeted Monday.
When asked about
Trump’s tweet, Spicer responded, “he’s using he words that the media is using.”
He stressed that the
policy does not prevent all Muslims from traveling to the U.S., and that many
Muslim-majority nations are not included.
“It can’t be a ban if
you’re letting a million people in,” he said. “If 325,000 people from another
country can come in, that is by nature not a ban. It is extreme vetting.”
The spokesman launched
into a broad criticism of media coverage of the order, including reports that
top Cabinet officials and lawmakers had not been informed of the final policy
ahead of Trump’s Friday announcement.
“With all due respect,
I think you have been part of the confusion,” he told reporters.
The order bars from
people from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Sudan, Somalia and Libya from traveling
to the U.S. for at least 90 days. It also suspends refugee admissions from all
countries for four months and indefinitely blocks Syrian refugees from entering
the country.
Trump has called it a
“ban” on more than one occasion.
The president also
used the term Saturday when he said he would stick by his new policy despite
widespread outcry from critics.
“We’re going to have a
very, very strict ban and we’re going to have extreme vetting, which we should
have had in this country for many years,” he said.
Spicer also called the provision temporarily
blocking travel from the seven Middle Eastern and African nations a “90-day
ban” during a Sunday appearance on ABC’s “This Week.”
Analysis
– This must be another example of alternative facts, or alternative reality.
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