The way that the federal court system works
is we have three levels we have the
district courts which there's 92 of
those after that its the circuit court
there's 13 of those and then finally the
supreme court only one of those they are
the district court has original
jurisdiction meaning that all court
the vast majority of cases originated at
that level the court they then, depending
on the outcome, the different parties
might want to appeal that decision it
would go to the next level in this case
it the original restraining order was
issued by a federal district judge in
Washington it was appealed by the
Trump administration so we sent to the
circuit court who upheld the lower
court's decision and then gets it has
been appealed to the supreme court but we have yet to
see if that's gonna be heard or not
the trump administration is going to
appeal this decision which means that it
would go to the next highest level which is the
final level and only one Court the
Supreme Court is not have to hear these
cases it it makes its own decisions as a
body whether or not want to hear it it
takes four members to decide whether they
want to hear a court case in all
likelihood i would suspect this will
make it up because it's such a salient
issue and public opinion is the devisive on it
that want it that probably will go to
the court and then we'll watch what happens because
right now we only have eight of our nine
justices and a tie would mean that we
would uphold the lower court decision so
the restraining order would stay in
place under that circumstance important  thing to
keep in mind with this particular court
case is that were not debating the
constitutionality of the Muslim ban
we're talking about a restraining order
that was placed by the district federal
judge meaning that the federal
government could no longer implement the
law in the way that the original
executive order
stated they could nothing about whether
or not the law is legal or not so in
this case if if we're going to supreme
court and they were to uphold this
restraining order that means the law can
be applied that wouldn't stop the Trump
administration from potentially changing
the law or issuing a new executive order
with similar pretenses just in a format
that would get around the issues that
the federal district judge had with the
original long
