SCOTUS news and opinions

This decision feels like it's crossing the line from where the 6 need to face consequences beyond just impeachment and removal.

I am reminded of the words of Frederick Douglass:
The Supreme Court of the United States is not the only power in this world. It is very great, but the Supreme Court of the Almighty is greater. Judge Taney can do many things, but he cannot perform impossibilities. He cannot bale out the ocean, annihilate this firm old earth, or pluck the silvery star of liberty from our Northern sky. He may decide, and decide again; but he cannot reverse the decision of the Most High. He cannot change the essential nature of things—making evil good, and good evil.
 
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Woah now, don't you know the respectable bipartisan thing to do is to send Trump another strongly worded letter while he dismantles any pretense of liberal democracy?
 
This is yet another "be careful of what you wish for" situation. If district judges can no longer issue nationwide injunctions, this will also apply when Democrat presidents start doing things that people don't like, you know, like Biden's student debt relief.
 
This is yet another "be careful of what you wish for" situation. If district judges can no longer issue nationwide injunctions, this will also apply when Democrat presidents start doing things that people don't like, you know, like Biden's student debt relief.
Or that one Texas judge that keep ruling against abortion stuff.
 
This is yet another "be careful of what you wish for" situation. If district judges can no longer issue nationwide injunctions, this will also apply when Democrat presidents start doing things that people don't like, you know, like Biden's student debt relief.
Optimistic to believe GOP will give up power anytime soon.
 
This is yet another "be careful of what you wish for" situation. If district judges can no longer issue nationwide injunctions, this will also apply when Democrat presidents start doing things that people don't like, you know, like Biden's student debt relief.


Nah, SCOTUS would simply quickly shadow docket some tortured ruling when Republicans lob a lawsuit at a Dem president allowing for a nationwide injunction in that case.
 
Nah, SCOTUS would simply quickly shadow docket some tortured ruling when Republicans lob a lawsuit at a Dem president allowing for a nationwide injunction in that case.

SCOTUS can itself also just issue nationwide injunctions against Dem Presidents.
 
They sidestepped the broader question by only ruling on scope, so naturally the strategy should be to jam every circuit with cases to frustrate attack on the 14th amendment.
You're almost there: the possibility is left open for far greater use of class action lawsuits, to represent a broader concurrence of plaintiffs. Granted these now may take much more time to assemble in order to have an effect.

That the nationwide injunction is (rightly) dead is only because of single persons who can find a sympathetic judge to block not only executive actions by democratically-enacted laws as well. Which is really just like having dozens of little dictators instead of one big one that is also not preferable either...
 
Actions that violate constitutional right are not democratically enacted by any definition, no matter how many people vote to make it so, because ten thousand million people voting unanimously to do something they have no power to do is still not a valid democratic decision.

The solution to forum shopping is to have much stronger requirements on where a lawsuit may be filled to prevent abuse ; not making constitutional rights something that has to be protected one person at a time (and only provided that person has the means for a constitutional challenge, of course).

At most, it might be limiting the territorial scope of a given judge's ability to issue injunctions to the territory their judicial seat cover (with higher courts having the ability to expand the injunction to a wider area).
 
We need regional judges to ban guns, or gun ownership, or AR15 ownership etc.
 
The strategy of SCOTUS

A friend asked my opinion on an op-ed in the New York Times today, written by a scholar whose work was much cited by the majority in Friday’s birthright citizenship case. I’m not naming the scholar or linking to the op-ed because, as I told my friend, I think the scholar is disingenuous - his defense of the opinion cannot be taken seriously. All this just by way of background.

My friend commented that for nonlawyers it is hard to really grasp what this term’s Supreme Court decisions mean. I told him that this is definitely intentional by the Court, in my opinion. The current Supreme Court rolls just like the President they are rushing to empower, through a combination of blitz and stealth.

The blitz is the wave upon wave of dreadful opinions on the merits. The stealth is in the shadow docket rulings. The combined goal, just as with Trump’s EOs and secretive military moves, is to consolidate anti-constitutional, authoritarian power in the hands of the right. The current Supreme Court is not engaged in adjudication as that practice works in a pluralistic constitutional. democracy. It is simply another arm of a dictatorial takeover of the U.S. federal government.

So why should a legal scholar or lawyer-activist ever bother explaining what the Supreme Court is doing? It certainly isn’t to evaluate the merits of the Court’s work as adjudication. They are not adjudicating so it isn’t coherent to say that their adjudication is bad qua adjudication. They are dictating and they are dictating ethically horrible and existentially dangerous outcomes.

We lawyers who believe in pluralistic constitutional democracy and rule of law have an imperative obligation to do as much explaining as we possibly can about what is going on in this country, especially with the Supreme Court.

We might be able to rouse and bolster opposition to the rise of a fascist authoritarian federal government in the U.S. At least we can create a real time record of what Republican Fascists are doing via the Trump executive, the Republican controlled Congress, and a Supreme Court that is in the tank for Trump, theocracy, and dictatorship.

Any serious discussion of current Supreme Court opinions must start from the recognition that Court is lawless. It is as if high energy physicists starting conducting their work according to astrology without being honest about the shift. This wouldn’t be bad physics; it wouldn’t be physics at all. But they might be able to bamboozle non-physicists. So honest physicists of integrity would have to keep exposing the sham.

Of course, if, like me, you think law and adjudication play a constitutive role in an actual pluralistic constitutional democracy and you believe members of a polity have obligations to one another to fight for this form of government, you will feel a moral and political imperative to expose a sham Supreme Court that might be different than what we would expect of my hypothetical physicists of integrity. But, I digress.
 
SCOTUS going after restrictions on party committee spending limits in coordination with individual candidates.

Expect it to be just as bad as the Citizens United ruling.

 

Federal judge issues new nationwide block against Trump’s order seeking to end birthright citizenship​

A federal judge agreed Thursday to issue a new nationwide block against President Donald Trump’s executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship.

The ruling from US District Judge Joseph Laplante is significant because the Supreme Court last month curbed the power of lower court judges to issue nationwide injunctions, while keeping intact the ability of plaintiffs to seek a widespread block of the order through class action lawsuits, which is what happened Thursday in New Hampshire.

Ruling from the bench, Laplante granted a request from immigration rights attorneys to certify a nationwide class that “will be comprised only of those deprived of citizenship” and issued a preliminary injunction indefinitely blocking Trump’s Day One order from being enforced against born and unborn babies who would be impacted by the policy.

“The preliminary injunction is just not a close call to the court,” Laplante said during a hearing. “The deprivation of US citizenship and an abrupt change of policy that was longstanding … that’s irreparable harm.” US citizenship, the judge added, “is the greatest privilege that exists in the world.” The judge, an appointee of former President George W. Bush, said he would pause his order for several days to give the Trump administration time to appeal his decision.

Laplante’s ruling could prove to be a critical bulwark against Trump’s policy as other courts scramble to take a second look at their decisions in light of the Supreme Court’s ruling. In February, Laplante indefinitely blocked the Trump administration from enforcing the order only against members of several nonprofit groups who would have been impacted by it. “I’m the judge who wasn’t comfortable with issuing a nationwide injunction. Class action is different,” the judge said at one point during Thursday’s hearing. “The Supreme Court suggested class action is a better option.” In his ruling earlier this year, Laplante said Trump’s order “contradicts the text of the Fourteenth Amendment and the century-old untouched precedent that interprets it.”

Several other judges similarly ruled that Trump’s order was unconstitutional, but their injunctions applied nationwide and prompted the administration to mount the series of appeals that eventually landed before the Supreme Court. Thursday’s proceeding focused largely on the request from immigration rights attorneys who brought the legal challenge for Laplante to certify a class of individuals that would include “all current and future children” who would be affected by Trump’s order, and their parents. The judge’s ruling Thursday did not include the parents in the class. The judge appeared sympathetic to arguments pushed by the Justice Department that certifying a class including the parents might run up against the federal rules regarding class certification if those adults each had immigration situations that were significantly different from another adult in the class.

DOJ attorney Eric Hamilton had wanted the judge to allow for discovery so more information could be gathered on the adults who are part of the legal challenge, but the judge, aware of the urgency of the litigation, noted that such court-ordered fact-finding wouldn’t be feasible. “You’re right, (ordinarily) we’d conduct discovery before granting class certification,” Laplante said. “There’s no time for discovery.”

“No court in the country has agreed with the administration on the underlying constitutional question. Every court has said that this order is unconstitutional, and so we expect to prevail on that question,” said Cody Wofsy, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney who helped bring the pair of New Hampshire cases. “The issue before the court on Thursday is ultimately just: procedurally, how are we going to ensure that every single child is protected?”

Class action lawsuits require “class representatives,” or individuals who, if the class is certified, will represent the class members. In this case, those proposed representatives had included a Honduran asylum-seeker – referred to in court papers as “Barbara” – who is living in New Hampshire and expecting a baby in October, and a Brazilian man – referred to as “Mark” – who is attempting to get lawful permanent status. Mark’s wife – who is not in the US lawfully – gave birth in March.

“If the Order is left in place,” the lawyers wrote, “those children will face numerous obstacles to life in the United States, including stigma and potential statelessness; loss of their right to vote, serve on federal juries and in many elected offices, and work in various federal jobs; ineligibility for various federal programs; and potential arrest, detention, and deportation to countries they may have never even seen.”
https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/02/politics/john-roberts-assignment-power-trump-barrett
Signed by Trump on January 20, the executive order, titled “PROTECTING THE MEANING AND VALUE OF AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP,” said that the federal government will not “issue documents recognizing United States citizenship” to any children born on American soil to parents who were in the country unlawfully or were in the states lawfully but temporarily.

The Supreme Court said in its June 27 ruling that the administration cannot begin enforcing the order for 30 days, though the government is allowed to begin developing guidance on how the policy will be implemented. In the other challenges to Trump’s order, lower courts around the country have asked the parties to submit written legal arguments addressing how the Supreme Court’s ruling could impact the nationwide injunctions issued in those cases, and more court proceedings are expected in the coming days and weeks.

But that process will take time and it’s unclear whether any of those courts will narrow their injunctions ahead of when Trump is permitted to enforce the birthright policy. “I feel like we’re the only people who rushed around here,” Laplante quipped during Thursday’s hearing.

This story and headline have been updated with additional developments.

 
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