SCOTUS news and opinions

I would in normal time be in full agreement with your guess, and I fully agree with your dubious legal ground.

These times, and this court, are nothing normal and the thing they're willing to read in freedom of religion have been flabbergasting more than once. I'd still say you're more likely right than not, but it's decidedly not something I feel confident about.
I think it would be a very easy thing to argue that while religious grounds for denying service are understandable within the private sphere (See Masterpiece Cakeshop), it would be different for a paid public servant who's basically hired to follow the law without exception. And I don't think there's enough momentum for some self-negating idea to take root like "it's legal for gay couples to obtain marriages licenses, yes, but also permissible to refuse them because *meh* I don't feel like it..." That becomes grounds for a patchwork mess of who is and who isn't allowed to follow the law, and on what day of the week. On the contrary the actions of the appellant here (Kim Davis) is not a "display" of any religious sentiment by an individual(s), as say a Ten Commandments depiction in or around a courthouse [that sends the usual atheists into a conniption fit], but an active impediment to people's lives. So no I don't share your cynicism. What makes you think the current crop will really reverse this?
 
I think it would be a very easy thing to argue that while religious grounds for denying service are understandable within the private sphere (See Masterpiece Cakeshop), it would be different for a paid public servant who's basically hired to follow the law without exception. And I don't think there's enough momentum for some self-negating idea to take root like "it's legal for gay couples to obtain marriages licenses, yes, but also permissible to refuse them because *meh* I don't feel like it..." That becomes grounds for a patchwork mess of who is and who isn't allowed to follow the law, and on what day of the week. On the contrary the actions of the appellant here (Kim Davis) is not a "display" of any religious sentiment by an individual(s), as say a Ten Commandments depiction in or around a courthouse [that sends the usual atheists into a conniption fit], but an active impediment to people's lives. So no I don't share your cynicism. What makes you think the current crop will really reverse this?
Because they can. They gave Trump blanket immunity from criminal prosecution and corruption.
 

Deciding to Hear a Case​

The process of selecting which cases the Supreme Court will hear follows a different numerical standard. To have a case placed on the Court’s docket, a party must file a “petition for a writ of certiorari.” The justices then vote on whether to grant this petition, a process governed by the “Rule of Four.”

This rule dictates that only four of the nine justices need to vote in favor of hearing a case for the writ to be granted. This practice ensures that a minority of the Court can bring a significant legal issue forward for consideration, preventing a five-justice majority from completely controlling the Court’s agenda.

 

Gorsuch and Kavanaugh warn lower court judges in Trump cases​


In Donald Trump’s long-running feud with federal judges, the president has found some support in an unlikely place: the nation’s highest court.

A growing sense of frustration with some lower courts — articulated in terms that at times sound similar to Trump’s own rhetoric — has crept into a series of opinions this summer from the Supreme Court’s conservative justices as they juggle a flood of emergency cases dealing with Trump’s second term.

“Lower court judges may sometimes disagree with this court’s decisions, but they are never free to defy them,” Justice Neil Gorsuch admonished in an opinion last week tied to the court’s decision to allow Trump to cancel nearly $800 million in research grants.

The rebuke, which was joined by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, flipped the narrative that it is Trump who has pushed legal boundaries with his flurry of executive orders and support for impeaching judges who rule against him. A wave of legal conservatives took to social media to tout Gorsuch’s warning.

“This is now the third time in a matter of weeks this court has had to intercede in a case ‘squarely controlled’ by one of its precedents,” wrote Gorsuch, who was Trump’s first nominee to the high court. (Kavanaugh was Trump’s second.) “When this court issues a decision, it constitutes a precedent that commands respect in lower courts.”

Other conservatives have been just as harsh this year. Justice Samuel Alito in March accused a federal judge in another case involving a Trump policy as committing an “act of judicial hubris” and “self-aggrandizement of its jurisdiction.”

The Supreme Court has been consistently siding with Trump on the emergency docket for months, including in high-profile cases dealing with immigration, spending and the leadership of independent agencies. And Trump has won even in cases in which there are serious arguments that his administration defied a lower court, said Steve Vladeck, CNN Supreme Court analyst and professor at Georgetown University Law Center.

“Gorsuch’s opinion in the NIH funding case is perhaps the most direct articulation yet of why — because the justices seem more concerned with lower courts correctly reading the tea leaves in their (often unexplained) rulings than with the executive branch behaving properly before the rest of the federal judiciary,” Vladeck said.

In a biting dissent in the research grant decision on Thursday, liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson described the result as “Calvinball jurisprudence,” in reference to the popular “Calvin and Hobbes” comic.

“Calvinball has only one rule: There are no fixed rules,” Jackson wrote. “We seem to have two: that one, and this administration always wins.”

Trump’s attacks on federal courts have subsided somewhat since the spring, when he repeatedly took to social media to rail against lower court judges and also privately complained about some members of the Supreme Court whom he appointed during his first term. But many of the president’s allies continue to work the refs and misstate the judiciary’s role reflexively chalking losses in court up to politics.

“We will not fall to rogue judges,” Trump’s former personal lawyer Alina Habba told Fox News last week after a federal judge ruled that she was not legally serving as the acting US attorney for New Jersey. “We will not fall to people trying to be political when they should just be doing their job respecting the president.”

Rewarding lawlessness?​

Critics say it is Trump who is to blame for the tension between the executive and judicial branches, not only because of his rhetoric but also because of how the Justice Department has handled a number of high-profile cases.

In a scathing dissent in an emergency case earlier this summer, Justice Sonia Sotomayor accused the court of “rewarding lawlessness” by siding with Trump in one of those cases.

“This is not the first time the court closes its eyes to noncompliance, nor, I fear, will it be the last,” Sotomayor wrote, dissenting from the court’s decision to allow the administration’s deportations of certain migrants to countries other than their homeland. “Yet each time this court rewards noncompliance with discretionary relief, it further erodes respect for courts and for the rule of law.”

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor is photographed during a group portrait at the Supreme Court in Washington on October 7, 2022.

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor is photographed during a group portrait at the Supreme Court in Washington on October 7, 2022.
Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
Sotomayor and Jackson, both liberals, are the only two on the Supreme Court who have served on district courts, where judges often take the initial stab at applying precedent to new litigation. Most of the other justices were formerly appeals court judges, where they review those first attempts by the district courts.

Gorsuch’s sharp lines not to mention Trump’s winning streak at the high court suggests that at least some of the justices believe that some lower courts are overreacting to the administration’s moves.

“Justice Gorsuch is making the obvious point that lower courts are required to follow the Supreme Court’s emergency orders as much as any other decree,” said James Burnham, an attorney and former Gorsuch clerk who served as general counsel for Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency. “The defiance of the Supreme Court’s emergency orders by some lower courts is unprecedented, extraordinary, and the Supreme Court must deal with it decisively.”

Carrie Severino, president of the conservative Judicial Crisis Network, cheered Gorsuch’s opinion on social media, writing that “yet again” it had “become necessary to remind district judges not to flout orders of the Supreme Court.”

But just how judges are supposed to approach the Supreme Court’s emergency orders particularly when they are opaque or include little explanation has been open to debate.

Early in Joe Biden’s presidency, defending the Supreme Court’s emergency docket, Alito stressed that its orders did not make precedent. Unlike the court’s regular merits docket, emergency orders are almost always decided without the benefit of oral argument or extensive briefing. They do not resolve the underlying legal questions of a case only what happens while the litigation continues.

“It’s one thing when there’s a majority opinion with clear language that resolves a legal question in a way everyone will understand, whether or not we agree with it,” Vladeck said. “It’s something else entirely when the justices provide literally zero analysis in support of a ruling, expect the lower courts to nevertheless understand which argument(s) they relied upon, and then subsequently chastise the lower courts for not reading their minds — and that something is hubris. If the court wants lower courts to treat its analyses as precedent, it should, you know, provide them.”

In recent weeks, a majority of justices have sought to reinforce the notion that short-term orders should control the outcome of similar cases.

In its fractured decision Thursday, a 5-4 majority said that US District Judge William Young erred by requiring the administration to revive nearly $800 million in National Institutes of Health research grants Trump canceled because they dealt with gender or diversity.

The high court’s unsigned opinion, which allows the NIH to keep those grants frozen, pointed to an earlier unsigned emergency order from April that permitted officials to block millions of dollars in grants to states intended to address teacher shortages.

Young, who was named to the court by President Ronald Reagan, said he had “never seen government racial discrimination like this.”

In its most notable decision this year, the Supreme Court stripped the power of lower court judges to issue so-called nationwide injunctions that have been used to shutdown policies adopted by presidents of both parties. That potentially landmark ruling came in a challenge to Trump’s executive order intending to end birthright citizenship.

Lower courts are continuing to work through whether there are other avenues judges can use to temporarily halt policies they believe are unconstitutional.

Kavanaugh: Judges are not ‘policymakers’​

In a decision last month allowing Trump to remove three members of the Consumer Product Safety Commission who were appointed by Biden, the court similarly pointed to an earlier unsigned emergency order that dealt with firings at labor agencies. At issue in both cases was whether the president may fire board members at independent agencies despite a federal law intended to shield them from removal for political reasons.

The CPSC firings, the court said in a brief, unsigned opinion on July 23, were “squarely controlled” by the earlier decision. Although the court’s “interim orders are not conclusive as to the merits,” a majority of the justices reasoned, “they inform how a court should” decide short-term questions “in like cases.”

The emergency docket has been a topic of debate as some of the justices have traveled the country for speaking engagements during the court’s summer break.

Speaking in California in July, Justice Elena Kagan — a member of the court’s liberal wing — suggested the high court could do more to “explain things better” so that lower court judges and the public understand clearly what the Supreme Court is deciding.

Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh listens to remarks during a visit by Irish Taoiseach Micheal Martin in Washington, DC, on March 12.

Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh listens to remarks during a visit by Irish Taoiseach Micheal Martin in Washington, DC, on March 12.
Leah Millis/Reuters

Days later, speaking to a group of judges and attorneys in Kansas City, Kavanaugh defended the court’s sometimes terse emergency orders.

Kavanaugh kicked off his speech by extolling the virtues of an independent judiciary. And he stressed that judges have a part to play in maintaining that independence.

He mentioned no specific case or judge, but the message could easily be read as a yellow flag for lower courts.

“Members of the judiciary have an important responsibility, of course, that goes with maintaining the independence — that responsibility, of course, to get it right, to do our hard work, to understand our role in the constitutional democracy,” Kavanaugh said. “We’re not the policymakers.”
 
Judges are not policy makers? Then maybe you should get back to ruling on precedents only, not running the country by stealth.
 
“In Donald Trump’s long-running feud with federal judges, the president has found some support in an unlikely place: the nation’s highest court.”

??? Did the person who wrote this just wake up from a 10 year coma?
No, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh just recently confirmed it publicly.
 
They have abandoned any pretense of reason or sanity to sell what little conscience they were ever possessed off in profit of a treasonous power grab.

The Law is nothing. The Leader is everything.
 

Appeals court judges publicly admonish Supreme Court justices: ‘We’re out here flailing’​

“They’re leaving the circuit courts, the district courts out in limbo,” one judge said during appeals court oral arguments that turned into a venting session about the high court’s terse emergency rulings.

Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals

During an unusual argument session Thursday, judges on the Richmond, Virginia-based 4th Circuit Court of Appeals questioned the clarity of recent rulings on the Supreme Court's so-called emergency docket. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
By Josh Gerstein and Kyle Cheney09/11/2025 03:12 PM EDT


Frustrated federal appeals court judges publicly wrestled Thursday with how to follow vague “signals” from the Supreme Court contained in tersely worded — and often unexplained — orders handed down on the justices’ emergency docket.
Some judges on the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals even questioned whether they still had a role to play or were expected, at least in some cases, to simply reiterate the high court’s orders and leave it at that.

Much more here:

 
That's what happens when you play Calvinball to allow Trump to always be right, even in blatant defiance of the Constitution.
 

US Supreme Court to revisit laws curtailing Trump's power to fire top officials​

The US Supreme Court has ruled President Donald Trump can dismiss a top official on the Federal Trade Commission.

In the 6-3 ruling, the justices sided with Trump, allowing him to fire Democratic Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter from her post while legal challenges continue.

It has also agreed to revisit a nearly century-old legal precedent that shields independent agencies set up by Congress from presidential interference.

Justice Elena Kagan, writing for the dissenting liberal justices, warned that the ruling allows the president to take charge of institutions Congress had intended to protect from partisanship.

"Congress, as everyone agrees, prohibited each of those presidential removals," Justice Elena Kagan wrote in her dissent. "Yet the majority, stay order by stay order, has handed full control of all those agencies to the President."

"He may now remove - so says the majority, though Congress said differently - any member he wishes, for any reason or no reason at all. And he may thereby extinguish the agencies' bipartisanship and independence, " Justice Kagan added.

The Supreme Court's Monday ruling said the justices would hear arguments in December on overturning a 1935 decision that allowed Congress to set up independent agencies insulated from political interference.

In the 90-year-old ruling known as Humphrey's Executor, the court sided with another FTC commissioner who was fired by Franklin D Roosevelt. The justices then ruled that commissioners could be removed only for misconduct or neglect of duty.

The FTC, which enforces consumer protection, typically has five commissioners - three from the president's party and two from the opposing party.

Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya, two Democratic members of the FTC, were fired by Trump in March.

A federal judge ruled in July in favour of Slaughter, declaring her dismissal "unlawful" under the longstanding precedent. Bedoya later resigned, but Slaughter continued her legal battle.

Earlier this month, the Supreme Court issued a temporary order permitting Trump to proceed with the dismissal as the justices considered whether to take up the case - a move now confirmed by Monday's decision.

Separately, the court is also considering the Trump administration's request to remove Lisa Cook as a Federal Reserve governor.

Cook was fired in August after the administration accused her of committing mortgage fraud.

The governor has denied any wrongdoing, and a federal court sided with her stating the president did not have the power to remove her.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1kw082djn4o
 
The shadow docket cedes more and more power to the president without explanation. Why are they so desperate to grant the president imperial powers?
 
The shadow docket cedes more and more power to the president without explanation. Why are they so desperate to grant the president imperial powers?
SCOTUS wants to empower the GOP and disenfranchise the Dems.
 

US Supreme Court to revisit laws curtailing Trump's power to fire top officials​

The US Supreme Court has ruled President Donald Trump can dismiss a top official on the Federal Trade Commission.

In the 6-3 ruling, the justices sided with Trump, allowing him to fire Democratic Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter from her post while legal challenges continue.

It has also agreed to revisit a nearly century-old legal precedent that shields independent agencies set up by Congress from presidential interference.

Justice Elena Kagan, writing for the dissenting liberal justices, warned that the ruling allows the president to take charge of institutions Congress had intended to protect from partisanship.

"Congress, as everyone agrees, prohibited each of those presidential removals," Justice Elena Kagan wrote in her dissent. "Yet the majority, stay order by stay order, has handed full control of all those agencies to the President."

"He may now remove - so says the majority, though Congress said differently - any member he wishes, for any reason or no reason at all. And he may thereby extinguish the agencies' bipartisanship and independence, " Justice Kagan added.

The Supreme Court's Monday ruling said the justices would hear arguments in December on overturning a 1935 decision that allowed Congress to set up independent agencies insulated from political interference.

In the 90-year-old ruling known as Humphrey's Executor, the court sided with another FTC commissioner who was fired by Franklin D Roosevelt. The justices then ruled that commissioners could be removed only for misconduct or neglect of duty.

The FTC, which enforces consumer protection, typically has five commissioners - three from the president's party and two from the opposing party.

Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya, two Democratic members of the FTC, were fired by Trump in March.

A federal judge ruled in July in favour of Slaughter, declaring her dismissal "unlawful" under the longstanding precedent. Bedoya later resigned, but Slaughter continued her legal battle.

Earlier this month, the Supreme Court issued a temporary order permitting Trump to proceed with the dismissal as the justices considered whether to take up the case - a move now confirmed by Monday's decision.

Separately, the court is also considering the Trump administration's request to remove Lisa Cook as a Federal Reserve governor.

Cook was fired in August after the administration accused her of committing mortgage fraud.

The governor has denied any wrongdoing, and a federal court sided with her stating the president did not have the power to remove her.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1kw082djn4o
Question - if one of the Democratic FTC commissioners resigned, has Trump gotten around to appointing their Democratic successor? Frankly I wouldn't be surprised if he hasn't as it seems Trump wants to fire all Democratic appointees but not put any Democratic replacements in place either (as the article says, the FTC requires 3 appointees from the President's party and 2 appointees from the opposing party).
 
Trump doesn't care what the law says. He will do what he wants and SCOTUS will let him.
 
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Supreme Court allows Trump to withhold $4 billion in foreign aid​

The Supreme Court on Friday cleared the way for the Trump administration to continue to withhold over $4 billion in foreign aid already approved by Congress.

Earlier this month, a federal judge in Washington, D.C. ordered the administration to release billions in foreign aid funds by the end of September — which the administration later appealed.

On Friday, the justices voted 6-3 along ideological lines to allow the administration to freeze the foreign aid funds. The court's conservatives said Trump's foreign policy authority outweighed the harms claimed by the international aid groups suing and suggested that the groups may not have the standing to sue.

In the dissent, Justice Elena Kagan took issue with the way the ruling was reached, which was through the emergency docket.

"We have had to consider this application on a short fuse — less than three weeks. We have done so with scant briefing, no oral argument, and no opportunity to deliberate in conference," Kagan wrote.

Last month, President Trump informed House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., that he will not be spending $4.9 billion in congressionally approved foreign aid through a controversial and rare authority known as a pocket rescission.

Typically, lawmakers have 45 days to consider a request to rescind or cancel appropriated funds. But when a request comes close to the end of a budget year, the president may bypass the legislative branch. A pocket rescission has not been used since the 1970s.

The pocket rescission includes targeting funds for development assistance grants, the United Nations, and international peacekeeping operations
https://www.npr.org/2025/09/26/nx-s...et-rescission?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us
 

Trump administration asks U.S. Supreme Court to uphold order aimed at ending birthright citizenship​

Lower-court judges have so far blocked order from taking effect anywhere

U.S. President Donald Trump 's administration is asking the Supreme Court to uphold his birthright citizenship order declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily are not American citizens.

The appeal, shared with The Associated Press on Saturday, sets in motion a process at the high court in Washington, D.C., that could lead to a definitive ruling from the justices by early summer on whether the citizenship restrictions are constitutional.

Lower-court judges have so far blocked them from taking effect anywhere. The Republican administration is not asking the court to let the restrictions take effect before it rules.

The Justice Department's petition has been shared with lawyers for parties challenging the order, but is not yet docketed at the Supreme Court.

Any decision on whether to take up the case is probably months away and arguments likely would not take place until the late winter or early spring.

"The lower court's decisions invalidated a policy of prime importance to the president and his administration in a manner that undermines our border security," Solicitor General D. John Sauer wrote in the petition. "Those decisions confer, without lawful justification, the privilege of American citizenship on hundreds of thousands of unqualified people."

'This executive order is illegal,' lawyer argues​

Cody Wofsy, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer, represents children who would be affected by Trump's restrictions.

Wofsy said the administration's plan is plainly unconstitutional.

"This executive order is illegal, full stop, and no amount of manoeuvring from the administration is going to change that. We will continue to ensure that no baby's citizenship is ever stripped away by this cruel and senseless order," Wofsy said in an email.

Trump signed the executive order In January on the first day of his second term in the White House. Critics have said it would upend more than 125 years of understanding that the Constitution's 14th Amendment confers citizenship on everyone born on American soil, with narrow exceptions for the children of foreign diplomats and those born to a foreign occupying force.

In a series of decisions, lower courts have struck down the executive order as unconstitutional, or likely so, even after a Supreme Court ruling in late June that limited judges' use of nationwide injunctions.

While the top court curbed the use of nationwide injunctions, it did not rule out other court orders that could have nationwide effects, including in class-action lawsuits and those brought by states. The justices did not decide at that time whether the underlying citizenship order is constitutional.

But every lower court that has looked at the issue has concluded that Trump's order violates or likely violates the 14th Amendment, which was intended to ensure that Black people, including former slaves, had citizenship.

California, New Hampshire cases under appeal​

The administration is appealing two cases.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in San Francisco ruled in July that a group of states that sued over the order needed a nationwide injunction to prevent the problems that would be caused by birthright citizenship being in effect in some states and not others. In July, a federal judge in New Hampshire blocked the citizenship order in a class-action lawsuit including all children who would be affected.

Birthright citizenship automatically makes anyone born in the United States an American citizen, including children born to mothers who are in the country illegally. But the administration asserts that children of non-citizens are not "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States and therefore not entitled to citizenship.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/trump-supreme-court-birthright-citizenship-fight-1.7645596
 

Clarence Thomas says precedent might not determine cases on upcoming supreme court docket​

The court is expected to weigh in next session on same-sex marriage, which it legalized in 2015

Settled legal precedent in the US is not “gospel” and in some instances may have been “something somebody dreamt up and others went along with”, the US supreme court justice Clarence Thomas has said.

Thomas – part of the conservative supermajority that has taken hold of the supreme court over Donald Trump’s two presidencies – delivered those comments Thursday at the Catholic University of America’s Columbus School of Law in Washington DC, ABC News and other outlets reported. His remarks preceded the nine-month term that the supreme court is scheduled to begin on 6 October.

“I don’t think that … any of these cases that have been decided are the gospel,” Thomas said during the rare public appearance, invoking a term which in a religious context is often used to refer to the word of God. “And I do give perspective to the precedent. But … the precedent should be respectful of our legal tradition, and our country and our laws, and be based on something – not just something somebody dreamt up and others went along with.”

Among the various cases Thomas and his colleagues are expected to weigh in on is a request to overturn the 2015 Obergefell supreme court decision that legalized marriage for same-sex couples nationwide. Other cases being mulled by the supreme court for its 2025-2026 term involve tariffs, trans rights, campaign finance law, religious rights and capital punishment.

Thomas was in the 5-4 minority that voted against the Obergefell decision.

Trump’s first presidency yielded him three supreme court picks that gave the panel a conservative supermajority which has frequently ruled in his favor after he returned to the White House in January.

In June 2022, as Joe Biden’s presidency interrupted Trump’s terms, that conservative supermajority also struck down the federal abortion rights which had been established decades earlier by the Roe v Wade supreme court precedent. Thomas wrote a concurring opinion in which he urged the court to “reconsider all … substantive due process precedents”, including in Obergefell as well as cases involving rights to contraception and same-sex intimacy.

Thomas reportedly told those listening to him at the Catholic University that he feels no obligation to hew to precedent “if I find it doesn’t make any sense”.

“I think we should demand that, no matter what the case is, that it has more than just a simple theoretical basis,” Thomas said. If it’s “totally stupid, and that’s what they’ve decided, you don’t go along with it just because it’s decided”.

He further outlined his belief that some supreme court justices have stuck to prior rulings as if they were passengers on a train without taking time to see who was driving the locomotive.

“You could go up to the engine room and find that it’s an orangutan driving,” Thomas said, according to the legal news website Above the Law. “And you’re going to follow that? I think we owe our fellow citizens more than that.”

Democrats had asked a judicial policymaking body to refer Thomas, a darling of the US political right, to the justice department after he failed to close gifts and travel provided by a wealthy conservative benefactor. But the US judicial conference rejected that request in early January.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/28/clarance-thomas-precedence-supreme-court-docket
 
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