Business Travel News Europe
Business Travel News Europe
  • NEWSOpen Menu
    • Accommodation
    • Air Travel
    • Ground Transport
    • Management
    • Meetings
    • On the Move
    • Payment & Expense
    • Sustainability
    • Technology
    • TMC & Distribution
    • Travel Procurement
    • Recent Issues
  • FEATURESOpen Menu
    • View All Features
  • CONVERSATIONSOpen Menu
    • Interviews and Q&As
    • Guest columns
    • Podcasts
    • VIEW ALL CONVERSATIONS
  • RESOURCESOpen Menu
    • Travel Risk Outlook 2026
    • The 2026 Hotlist
    • The 2025 Travel Manager Salary & Job Satisfaction report
    • Spotlight Series: Ground transportation 2025
    • The 2025 Business Travel Sustainability report
    • Spotlight Series: Accommodation 2025
    • Europe's Leading TMCs 2025
    • Spotlight Series: Air travel 2025
    • The 2025 Hotlist
    • The 2024 Travel Manager Salary & Job Satisfaction survey
    • Spotlight Series: Ground transportation 2024
    • Ecosystem Play – the 2024 travel tech report
    • Navigating towards net zero
    • Taking Flight: Small & midsize travel programmes
    • Spotlight Series: Accommodation 2024
    • Spotlight Series: Air travel 2024
    • Meetings Management 2024
    • Spotlight Series: Travel management companies 2024
  • EVENTSOpen Menu
    • All BTN News Desks
    • Webinars
    • Business Travel Show Europe
    • Business Travel Awards Europe
    • Business Travel ESG Summit
    • Entertainment Sports & Media Travel Summit
    • Business Travel Tech Talk
    • Business Travel Trends Forecasts
    • Strategic Meetings Summit
    • Business Travel Lodging Summit
    • Global Travel Risk Summit
    • VIEW ALL EVENTS
  • SUBSCRIBE
Business Travel News Europe
  • Business Travel News Europe on X
  • BTN Europe on LinkedIn
  • BTN Europe on Facebook
  • NEWS
    • Accommodation
    • Air Travel
    • Ground Transport
    • Management
    • Meetings
    • On the Move
    • Payment & Expense
    • Sustainability
    • Technology
    • TMC & Distribution
    • Travel Procurement
    • Recent Issues
    SubscribeBTN Europe newsletters
  • FEATURES
    • View All Features
    BTS Europe Buyer Interview: Ewa Doromoniec Vieira, Signify
    Travel AI and sustainability efforts can coexist, experts say
    BTS Europe Buyer Interview: Elisabetta Gibertoni, LivaNova

  • CONVERSATIONS
    • Interviews and Q&As
    • Guest columns
    • Podcasts
    • VIEW ALL CONVERSATIONS
    The end of the free look: AI is killing travel’s oldest bargainThe end of the free look: AI is killing travel’s oldest bargain
    Managed travel's innovation gap has a governance problemManaged travel's innovation gap has a governance problem
    AI is quietly rewiring buyer-supplier relationships in managed travelAI is quietly rewiring buyer-supplier relationships
  • RESOURCES
    • Travel Risk Outlook 2026
    • The 2026 Hotlist
    • The 2025 Travel Manager Salary & Job Satisfaction report
    • Spotlight Series: Ground transportation 2025
    • The 2025 Business Travel Sustainability report
    • Spotlight Series: Accommodation 2025
    • Europe's Leading TMCs 2025
    • Spotlight Series: Air travel 2025
    • The 2025 Hotlist
    • The 2024 Travel Manager Salary & Job Satisfaction survey
    • Spotlight Series: Ground transportation 2024
    • Ecosystem Play – the 2024 travel tech report
    • Navigating towards net zero
    • Taking Flight: Small & midsize travel programmes
    • Spotlight Series: Accommodation 2024
    • Spotlight Series: Air travel 2024
    • Meetings Management 2024
    • Spotlight Series: Travel management companies 2024
    Tools & ResourcesBTN Travel Management Tool BoxBTN AcademyBTN CommunitiesEurope's Leading TMCsBooking tools – the essential guideThe Spotlight SeriesThe HotlistThe Green ListTraveller Experience IndexCorporate Travel IndexGlossary of industry acronymsWhite Papers & Case Studies
  • EVENTS
    • All BTN News Desks
    • Webinars
    • Business Travel Show Europe
    • Business Travel Awards Europe
    • Business Travel ESG Summit
    • Entertainment Sports & Media Travel Summit
    • Business Travel Tech Talk
    • Business Travel Trends Forecasts
    • Strategic Meetings Summit
    • Business Travel Lodging Summit
    • Global Travel Risk Summit
    • VIEW ALL EVENTS
    Business Travel Show Europe

    24 - 25 June 2026, ExCeL London

    42nd Annual Travel Manager of the Year Awards & Reception

    InterContinental Chicago, IL - August 5, 2026

    11th Annual Entertainment Sports & Media Travel Summit Los Angeles

    Regent Santa Monica Beach - October 1, 2026

  • SUBSCRIBE

Global

Washington State Sues Trump, Citing Corporates' Concerns for Their Travelers

By Elizabeth West / 3 February 2017 / Contact Reporter
Business Travel News on X

On Jan. 30, the state of Washington filed the first lawsuit against Trump and his administration regarding the executive order. Filed by Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson, the suit accuses the Trump administration of violating the Constitution's guarantee of equal protection, the First Amendment's establishment clause, the right to due process and the federal Immigration and Nationality Act. The suit cites Washington state-headquartered companies, such as Redmond-based Microsoft, whose operations and recruitment will be adversely affected by the ban. The complaint reads:

Microsoft's U.S. workforce is heavily dependent on immigrants and guest workers. At least 76 employees at Microsoft are citizens of Iran, Iraq, Syria, Somalia, Sudan, Libya, or Yemen and hold U.S. temporary work visas. There may be other employees with permanent-resident status or green cards. These employees may be banned from re-entering the U.S. if they travel overseas or to the company's offices in Vancouver, British Columbia.

The complaint continues with Amazon and Expedia:

Seattle-based company Amazon also employs workers from every corner of the world. Amazon's employees, dependents of employees, and candidates for employment with Amazon have been impacted by the Executive Order that is the subject of this Complaint. Amazon has advised such employees currently in the United States to refrain from travel outside the United States.

Bellevue-based company Expedia operates a domestic and foreign travel business. At the time of this filing, Expedia has approximately 1,000 customers with existing flight reservations in or out of the United States who hold passports from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Somalia, Sudan, Libya, or Yemen. The executive orders restrict business, increase business costs, and impact current employees and employers.

Amazon and Expedia additionally have filed declarations in support of the lawsuit. Amazon's, signed by senior manager of mobility and immigration Ayesha Blackwell-Hawkins, cites 49 employees who have visas allowing work in the U.S. and who are affected by the travel ban. One of them, a U.K. lawyer who was born in Libya but has been a U.K. citizen for years, had plans to travel to the U.S. for business in February. "We have instructed the employee to cancel her plans and remain in the U.K. rather than risk being denied entry to the United States," the declaration said.

The declaration also cites 10 dependents of Amazon employees born in one of the countries identified in the executive order but living in the U.S. lawfully via H-1B, L-1B, E-3, LPR, F-1 OPT and TN visas. According to Amazon:

We reached out to impacted Amazon employees and dependents and recommended that they refrain from travel outside of the United States until further notice. Further,we have advised any such individuals who are living outside of the United States,with current plans to visit the US for business or personal reasons, to cancel those plans until the entry restrictions are lifted.

Amazon also cites seven employment candidates who were born in Iran but are citizens of Germany, Canada and Australia. The declaration states that Amazon is looking at alternatives that would place them in office locations outside the U.S.


We have instructed the employee to cancel her plans and remain in the U.K. rather than risk being denied entry to the United States."

Amazon, describing a Libya-born employee who's now a U.K. resident & had business travel to the U.S. planned

The declaration from online travel agency Expedia, which is the parent company of online corporate travel agency Egencia, reads:

As of January 29, 2017, at least 1,000 Expedia customers who hold passports issued by one of the seven impacted countries have purchased current itineraries that involve flights to, from or through the United States. Almost 500 of the flights have a U.S. origin, over 500 have a U.S. destination, and approximately 30 have connections in the United States. … Expedia is in the process of contacting all affected travelers and continues to incur costs to monitor the impacts of the Executive Order and determine how best to take care of its customers around the globe.

Expedia's declaration goes on to cite the uncertainty around the executive order and how that will continue to affect its business. It also claims the order "has restrained Expedia employees' ability to travel freely, for professional or business purposes," and cited Expedia's notice to all employees from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen who are living in the U.S. It told those employees to refrain from travel until further notice. The company has identified two employees who would be at risk for not being re-admitted to the U.S. "[They] are unable to travel freely abroad to conduct business or their personal affairs," according to the document.

Ferguson said in a press conference on Monday that, if successful, Washington state's suit would "have the effect of invalidating the President's unlawful action nationwide." He also is seeking a temporary restraining order to "immediately halt" the implementation of the executive order.

On Wednesday, the Trump administration issued clarification around permanent U.S. residents with green cards. Earlier this week, the administration had stated that entry for such residents would be considered on a case-by-case basis. Wednesday's clarification from White House spokesman Sean Spicer, however, stated, "They no longer need a waiver because if they are a legal permanent resident, they won't need it anymore." The statuses of travelers with work and student visas remain unclear.

More Global
Related
South African Airways Enters Bankruptcy Protection

South African Airways' board has voted to put the carrier into a "business rescue" bankruptcy protection program to save it from collapse. ...

VAT Law Change Could Trigger Business Travel Cost Hikes in Germany

Corporates could lose their ability to reclaim value-added tax on hotel and other bookings in Germany after the country's parliament last week approved...

U.S. Customs and Border Protection Updates Visa Waiver Program Portal

U.S. Customs and Border Protection last week introduced two features to the Electronic System for Travel Authorization, the online portal through which...

SPONSORED CONTENT

All your deliverables, delivered from the clouds
All your deliverables, delivered from the cloudsBy Virgin Atlantic

Feel the business... KEEP READING

Cathay Pacific: Elevating Your Business Travel Experience
Cathay Pacific: Elevating Your Business Travel ExperienceBy Cathay Pacific

As business travel accelerates, Cathay Pacific remains a leader, delivering seamless, end-to-end... KEEP READING

Experience brilliantly different
Experience brilliantly differentBy Virgin Atlantic and Delta Air Lines

with Virgin Atlantic and Delta Air Lines... KEEP READING

More Global

South African Airways Enters Bankruptcy Protection
VAT Law Change Could Trigger Business Travel Cost Hikes in Germany
U.S. Customs and Border Protection Updates Visa Waiver Program Portal
Yapta Continues Growth Spurt with Japanese TMC Deal

VIEW ALL
  • Most Read
  • Most Shared
  1. Strikes to disrupt rail services in France and Italy this week
  2. EU agrees 'landmark' reforms to air passenger rights amid industry pushback
  3. Germany eliminates airport transit visa for Indian travellers
  4. Global airline earnings to halve in 2026 as fuel prices soar – IATA
  5. Juniper Group acquires Deem from Travelport
  1. Radisson Collection to debut in Frankfurt
  2. The end of the free look: AI is killing travel’s oldest bargain
  3. More corporates using travel as ‘carrot’ to attract staff
  4. Qantas confirms Sydney to London non-stop flight launch
  5. Bolt introduces employee-pay mode on business platform
Business Travel News EuropeBusiness Travel News Europe
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Advertise
  • EDITORIAL CALENDAR
  • Business Travel Show Europe
  • Business Travel News Europe on X
  • BTN Europe on LinkedIn
  • BTN Europe on Facebook
BUSINESS TRAVEL NEWS EUROPE
NORTHSTAR TRAVEL GROUP
Business Travel News Europe
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Advertise
  • Editorial calendar
  • Editorial guidelines
  • Subscribe to BTN Europe
  • Subscribe to BTN U.S.
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms & conditions
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Data
Northstar Travel Group
  • Corporate travel
  • Business Travel Show
  • Business Travel Awards
  • BTN U.S.
  • The Beat
  • Travel Procurement

  • Travel Technology
  • Travel Tech Show
  • Phocuswire
  • Phocuswright
  • Intelliguide
  • Meetings & incentives
  • M&IT
  • AMI
  • ConventionSource
  • M&IT Awards

  • Retail travel
  • Travel Weekly
  • Travel Pulse

  • Northstar Travel Group
  • View all Northstar brands
BTNGroup
Business Travel News EuropeBusiness Travel NewsTravel ProcurementThe BeatBusiness Travel Show Europe
Northstar Travel Group
Copyright ©2026, Northstar Travel Media Ltd, New London House,172 Drury Lane, WC2B 5QR
RRManagement rrtestprocurement