Here is the revised travel ban (but note the very large exceptions to follow in the next tweet):pic.twitter.com/oYSEeaw8Mm
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Washington AG Bob Ferguson says the new EO is "drastically narrowed" from the originally challenged EO, cautious on next steps.pic.twitter.com/d0HwtmXcFh
On those next steps: "Too soon to say what we're going to do. That's the bottom line," saying the legal issues are "complex and numerous."
Ferguson says that he hopes "the president and his advisers" learned from the original order process that "we are a nation of laws."
The 10-day delay until implementation gives Ferguson and his office, he says, time to determine their next steps.
"Not even close," Ferguson says, to deciding the next steps.
Ferguson: "The changes in this new executive order are profound. ... That's a rewarding feeling, as a legal team."
"A period of two to three days" for review on the next steps, Ferguson says.
Notably, AG Mark Herring of Virginia had a similarly cautious response.pic.twitter.com/29f0EkTZDU
Stunned they didn't just put "BAD PEOPLE" in bright red marker next to each country 
Strange that Iraq is mentioned repeatedly in justifying ban of other nations, yet 5hey are exempted from the ban this time.
The glaring problem is that the countries not covered are actually responsible for terrorism
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