The most relevant portion of the bill of rights is clause 8:
Bill of Rights:
8. No Nation shall be ejected from the region, or banned from any forum, except as expressly authorized by this Constitution or the Legal Code. Should any official of a government authority of the region with authority to act, declare that the immediate ejection or banning of a Nation is an urgent matter of regional security, the ejected or banned Nation shall have prompt and immediate recourse to judicial review of the matter. The WA Delegate shall not exercise the power of ejection or banning unless expressly authorized by a specific action of a government authority of the region pursuant to this Constitution or to the Legal Code.
The question is, is the WA Delegate himself under the current constitution a governmental authority empowered to authorize ejections and/or bans?
In one perspective the precedent since the adoption of the Monte Ozarka constitution has unequivocally been yes. Delegates have banned recruiters, soldiers of regions at war with us, and truly annoying spammers on their own recognizance.
One could however argue that just because all these acts went unchallenged, it does not mean they were legal.
It is perhaps not a good idea for the Court to change what is effectively settled law however, like the previous Court did eliciting much displeasure.
The Constitution expressly authorizes the Delegate to eject violators of NationStates rules on their own recognizance:
Constitution Article VI Section 2 Clause 2:
2. The Delegate is permitted to eject and/or ban violators of NationStates rules without prior or further consultation from the Government.
The Constitution also allows ejection and/or banning as a punishment for breaking regional law. The laws which might be relevant are laws 14, 22, and 27. TNP Law 14 prohibits membership in any region at war with TNP. Law 22 prohibits treason; espionage; sedition; election fraud & impersonation; crashing, phishing, and (severe) spamming, and the condoning thereof. Law 27 prohibits proxy usage.
The Delegate has not stated that Govindia violated any of these laws. Instead, the Delegate has pointed to TNP Law 28 which states:
TNP Law 28:
1. Assembly members whose nation has CTE'd (Ceased to Exist) or who have moved out of The North Pacific when not on official business shall be removed from membership automatically by the Speaker.
I hope this information is useful to the rest of the Court.