In a filing to a federal appeals court on Sunday, about 100 technology companies argued that Trump’s temporary ban on all visitors from seven predominantly Muslim countries would hurt their businesses and violate both the immigration law and the United States Constitution. A lower court on Friday temporarily halted crucial parts of the ban, but the Trump administration said it would fight to have them reinstated.
“The tremendous impact of immigrants on America — and on American business — is not happenstance,” the companies said in a friend-of-the-court filing. “People who choose to leave everything that is familiar and journey to an unknown land to make a new life necessarily are endowed with drive, creativity, determination — and just plain guts.”
“The energy they bring to America,” it said, “is a key reason why the American economy has been the greatest engine of prosperity and innovation in history.”
Trump administration officials were not immediately available to comment. The issue is set to be considered this week by the San Francisco-based United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
In addition to Apple, Facebook and Google, major technology names that signed the brief included Microsoft, Uber, Twitter, Airbnb, Intel and Snap, the parent of Snapchat. A few names from outside the technology field, like Levi Strauss, the jeans maker, and Chobani, a yogurt company, also signed the brief.
Separately, a group of prominent Democrats also protested the ban in a court filing.
The filing is likely to fray already tense relations between Trump and the technology industry.
Its most prominent figures largely backed Trump's rival, Hillary Clinton, in the election campaign.
The tech industry's top executives have faced a balancing act. Challenging Trump's policies could invite political blowback, particularly from a president who is unafraid to call out companies publicly.
At the same time, they have an outspoken employee base that views Trump's economic nationalism as anathema to the globalisation that has given rise to many of the companies.
Many tech workers are immigrants or from second-generation families, and Silicon Valley itself has a history of immigrants founding and leading some of its most impressive companies.
A number of tech executives initially tried to work with the administration, but a surge in opposition to Trump's immigration order led tech workers to call for their executives to push back.
Last week Uber's founder and chief executive, Travis Kalanick, stepped down from Trump's economic advisory council after pressure from employees, customers and drivers. Before that, Kalanick had been one of the most vocal proponents of engaging with the president.
The filing is also likely to set off speculations about why some companies did not sign the filing. Prominent technology names that did not sign include database company, Oracle, computer maker and tech firm, Hewlett-Packard and electric-car company, Tesla. Company officials could not be reached for comment.
Elon Musk of Tesla is on the council that Kalanick quit. "Activists should be pushing for more moderates to advise the president, not fewer. How could having only extremists advise him possibly be good?" Musk wrote on Twitter on Sunday.
His firms were not signatories to the legal filing. Nor was Palantir Technologies, a company co-founded by Peter Thiel, a prominent technology executive and a staunch supporter of Trump. Thiel's presence on the board of Facebook has led some employees there to criticise his position.
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