Author Topic: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters) SCOTUS  (Read 709107 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Noted.  TY.

Body-by-Guinness

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Amici of Shame
« Reply #1901 on: March 14, 2024, 01:37:33 PM »
23 states and DC support the Biden side of the argument in Missouri v. Biden:

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/03/23-democrat-states-district-columbia-file-amicus-briefs/?fbclid=IwAR0Ai7JkNWxx3eet_35nBjHG2vCKkmBH4JuPSAuaiiEoFGHNA0ku5MCruY8

Shameful, unconstitutional behavior.
« Last Edit: March 21, 2024, 05:06:38 PM by Body-by-Guinness »

Crafty_Dog

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A case of primal importance.

ccp

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Former Justice Breyer criticizes SCOTUS
« Reply #1903 on: March 18, 2024, 05:33:53 AM »
for being originalists instead of textualists.

(and of course, the Conservative justices  :x :roll:)


from far far left wing rag DNYUZ:
 
https://dnyuz.com/2024/03/18/justice-breyer-off-the-bench-sounds-an-alarm-over-the-supreme-courts-direction/

yet, some interesting (to me who knows little about such matters) about textualism vs originalism

This also noteworthy:

"Justice Breyer retired a little reluctantly, under pressure from liberals who wanted to make sure that President Biden could appoint his successor and that the conservative supermajority on the court, currently at 6 to 3, would not get any more lopsided."

Body-by-Guinness

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303 Creative v. Elenis (Wedding Cake Design)
« Reply #1904 on: March 29, 2024, 06:02:41 AM »

District Court Judgment in 303 Creative v. Elenis (the Wedding Web Site Design Case)
The Volokh Conspiracy / by Eugene Volokh / Mar 28, 2024 at 5:45 PM

Following the Supreme Court's remand to the Tenth Circuit, which in turn led to the remand to district court, Chief Judge Philip Brimmer (D. Colo.) rendered the following order Tuesday:

It is ORDERED that plaintiffs are the prevailing parties in this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). Plaintiffs and their counsel are entitled to recover their reasonable attorney's fees, costs, and expenses for work related to litigation before the district court. It is further

ORDERED that the First Amendment's Free Speech Clause prohibits Colorado from enforcing the Accommodation Clause of Colorado's Anti-Discrimination Act ("CADA"), Colo. Rev. Stat. § 24-34-601(2)(a)), to compel plaintiffs to create custom websites celebrating or depicting same-sex weddings or otherwise create or depict original, expressive, graphic or website designs inconsistent with her beliefs regarding same-sex marriage. It is further

ORDERED that the First Amendment's Free Speech Clause prohibits Colorado from enforcing CADA's Communication Clause to prevent plaintiffs from posting the following statement on her website or from making materially similar statements on her website and directly to prospective clients:

I firmly believe that God is calling me to this work. Why? I am personally convicted that He wants me – during these uncertain times for those who believe in biblical marriage – to shine His light and not stay silent. He is calling me to stand up for my faith, to explain His true story about marriage, and to use the talents and business He gave me to publicly proclaim and celebrate His design for marriage as a life-long union between one man and one woman.

These same religious convictions that motivate me also prevent me from creating websites promoting and celebrating ideas or messages that violate my beliefs. So I will not be able to create websites for same-sex marriages or any other marriage that is not between one man and one woman. Doing that would compromise my Christian witness and tell a story about marriage that contradicts God's true story of marriage – the very story He is calling me to promote.

It is further ORDERED that defendants, their officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys, and those acting in active concert or participation with them who receive actual notice of this order are permanently enjoined from enforcing:

[a.] CADA's Accommodations Clause to compel plaintiffs to create custom websites celebrating or depicting same-sex weddings or otherwise to create or depict original, expressive, graphic or website designs inconsistent with her beliefs regarding same-sex marriage; and

[b.] CADA's Communication Clause to prevent plaintiffs from posting the above statement on her website and from making materially similar statements on her website and directly to prospective clients….

For more on the reasoning, see the full order. The quick summary of the underlying factual dispute:

Plaintiff Lorie Smith, through her business, plaintiff 303 Creative LLC …, offers a variety of creative services, including website design, to the public. Ms. Smith intends to expand the scope of 303 Creative's services to include the design, creation, and publication of wedding websites. However, plaintiffs will decline any request to design, create, or promote content that promotes any conception of marriage other than marriage between one man and one woman. Plaintiffs have designed an addition to 303 Creative's website that includes a statement that they will not create websites "celebrating same-sex marriages or any other marriage that contradicts God's design for marriage."

The post District Court Judgment in 303 Creative v. Elenis (the Wedding Web Site Design Case) appeared first on Reason.com.

https://reason.com/volokh/2024/03/28/district-court-judgment-in-303-creative-v-elenis-the-wedding-web-site-design-case/
« Last Edit: March 29, 2024, 12:56:04 PM by Crafty_Dog »

DougMacG

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Constitutional Law, SCOTUS, Get off Sonia's back
« Reply #1905 on: April 19, 2024, 04:09:13 AM »
https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/16/opinions/justice-sonia-sotomayor-retire-reyes/index.html

She's in her 60s (69).  The President who would pick her replacement is in his 80s.  Schumer and Durbin are nearly that. Her mom lived into her 90s.  She lives with Type 1 diabetes. Minchin and Sinema are not reliable votes.

What part of lifetime appointment don't they understand.
« Last Edit: April 19, 2024, 05:52:31 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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Constitutional Law matters, SCOTUS, Sotomayor, federal and state powers
« Reply #1906 on: May 11, 2024, 07:36:20 AM »
Justice Sonia Sotomayor:  “I’m not sure I understand the distinction why the states would have the power [to institute a mandate such as  OSHA’s], but the federal government wouldn’t,”

Tenth Amendment: “the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.”

https://www.nationalreview.com/news/justice-sotomayor-claims-not-to-understand-the-distinction-between-state-and-federal-powers/


Crafty_Dog

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The Tenth, the Police Power over Health, and Sep of Powers for Rule Making.
« Reply #1907 on: May 11, 2024, 02:12:46 PM »
Back when I was teaching Constitutional Law at UNC Pembroke I had our class spend quite a bit of time on a 5th Circuit Case that grappled with precisely this question.

Doug is 100% correct, the "Police Power", which includes health matters was not granted to the Feds and thus, per the Tenth, pertains to the States.

The problem is the unsound jurisprudence surrounding the Interstate Commerce Clause-- the idea being that pandemics affect Interstate Commerce.

There is an additional layer here regarding Separation of Powers-- here OSHA was acting in a quasi-legislative manner which presents the C'l question as to whether its enabling statute granted it such, and even if it did, was it C'ly permissable- i.e. was an intelligible limiting principle whose articulation could enable meaningful judicial review of this question when presented.
« Last Edit: May 11, 2024, 02:14:37 PM by Crafty_Dog »


ccp

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According to Dems being a patriot makes one unfit to serve
« Reply #1909 on: May 23, 2024, 06:11:37 AM »
https://www.breitbart.com/clips/2024/05/22/blumenthal-alito-is-unfit-to-serve-at-a-minimum-he-must-recuse-from-all-trump-cases/

Me:

MAGA

could read =

PATRIOT

The LEFT uses MAGA as some sort of derogatory label.

As always they steal the language and distort its' meaning.

To them MAGA = nazi
To me MAGA = American Patriot

screw them.

Bottom line:
being a patriot is NOT a disqualification for SCOTUS
anymore then being a Democrat is
think all the libs who are and have been on SCOTUS.
Should we disqualify them?
« Last Edit: May 23, 2024, 06:15:42 AM by ccp »

Crafty_Dog

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"Upon further reading, Locke and his philosophical progeny understood the "laws of nature" are the moral law that God plainly reveals to all of humanity and can be discerned through reason, and without religious observance."

From a pleasant conversation on another forum.   The reference to "the Laws of Nature" is from our Declaration of Independence's phrase "the laws of Nature and of Nature's God".

Crafty_Dog

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Constitutional Convention
« Reply #1911 on: May 25, 2024, 08:45:44 AM »
I disagree with this due to lack of present day talent and doubts about ability to prevent runaway horseshit, but share it here in the interest of convesation:

file:///C:/Users/craft/Downloads/ConventionofStatesSummary.pdf

Crafty_Dog

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PP: the campaign to discredit SCOTUS
« Reply #1912 on: May 25, 2024, 08:53:31 AM »


NYT Scoop: Alito Is an 'Insurrectionist'
The Supreme Court justice has faced attacks over a couple of flag displays at his homes.

Nate Jackson


Democrats need to delegitimize the Supreme Court so they can eventually pack it with loyal leftists. Keep that in mind every time they attack Clarence Thomas over a vacation or Samuel Alito over a flag.

The latter justice has been the subject of leftist consternation for the last week or so, ever since The New York Times put a team of crack journalists on the case of a couple of flags flown by the Alito family.

First up was a breathless story drawing a straight line from Justice Alito to January 6. "At Justice Alito's House, a 'Stop the Steal' Symbol on Display," read the Times headline, followed by the teaser, "An upside-down flag, adopted by Trump supporters contesting the Biden victory, flew over the justice's front lawn as the Supreme Court was considering an election case."

The story didn't use the word "insurrectionists" (or, as Joe Biden recently called them, "erectionists"), but the Times insists the connection was clear: "The upside-down flag was aloft on Jan. 17, 2021, the images showed. President Donald J. Trump's supporters, including some brandishing the same symbol, had rioted at the Capitol a little over a week before."

Never mind that Alito was on the losing side of that election case, meaning the flag had no bearing on the outcome of the case.

More importantly, "I had no involvement whatsoever in the flying of the flag," Justice Alito said in an emailed statement to The Times. "It was briefly placed by Mrs. Alito in response to a neighbor's use of objectionable and personally insulting language on yard signs."

Shannon Bream of Fox News shares what the Times didn't tell you:

I spoke directly with Justice Alito about the flag story in the NYT. In addition to what's in the story, he told me a neighbor on their street had a "F*** Trump" sign that was within 50 feet of where children await the school bus in Jan 21. Mrs. Alito brought this up with the neighbor. According to Justice Alito, things escalated and the neighbor put up a sign personally addressing Mrs. Alito and blaming her for the Jan 6th attacks.

So, where did the "Stop the Steal" connection come from? An "expert" cited by the Times called an upside-down flag "the equivalent of putting a 'Stop the Steal' sign in your yard."

Oh, so it's a dog whistle for "experts."

The truth is that an upside-down flag has long been understood as a sign of distress.

A few days later, the Times put three journalists on another story about a "provocative flag" flown by the Alitos: "The justice's beach house displayed an 'Appeal to Heaven' flag, a symbol carried on Jan. 6 and associated with a push for a more Christian-minded government." The Times spends much of its word count in both articles discussing ethics rules for jurists, though none of those rules apply to spouses.

This flag appeared at the Long Beach Island house in 2023, but it, too, sounded the same dog whistle for "Stop the Steal."

Senator Dick Durbin called it part of "the Court's ongoing ethical crisis." Senator Mazie Hirono wailed, "We have an out-of-control Supreme Court majority." Clearly, the real game here is to delegitimize the Court. Senator Jeff Merkley literally said it: "Frustration with the Court in the sense that it is illegitimate is extremely high."

The long-term objective is delegitimizing the Court, but the short-term aim is winning a couple of cases. "Alito must recuse himself immediately from cases related to the 2020 election and the January 6th insurrection," Durbin insisted. He didn't say it, but these hit pieces are also retribution for Alito having written the Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade.

The Democrats attempt to smear and discredit every originalist, and they have been doing so since Ted Kennedy made a sick sport out of "borking" nominees to the bench. Alito was the victim of that same vile tactic in 2006, which left Mrs. Alito in tears at the time.

Furthermore, call me crazy, but it's pretty rich for leftists to be outraged about flags. They burn the American flag, for one thing, in addition to kneeling instead of saluting it during the national anthem. Spare me the outrage over flying it upside down.

They also plaster rainbow flags over almost literally everything (including the American flag) for large parts of the year, especially "Pride Month," which — I appeal to heaven! — starts in a few days. Last year in June, Joe Biden flew the garish transgender flag from the White House itself — while some dude flashed his prosthetic breasts on the lawn, I might add. Biden's State Department flies the rainbow flag at its facilities all over the world (except in Muslim countries).

"The Constitution provides that the government shall not establish any official religion," opined Senator Brian Schatz, but the rainbow flag is arguably a symbol of the Left's state religion. But the Times reporters have their knickers in a twist over a Revolutionary-era flag.

The "Appeal to Heaven" flag, by the way, originates with an important American named George Washington. Maybe the Times reporters have heard of him. He specifically commissioned it in 1775, and it was designed by his personal secretary, Colonel Joseph Reed. In a sense, it was the symbol of a real insurrection — the one against the British tyrants who overtaxed and tried to disarm American colonists. Come to think of it, that sounds familiar...


ccp

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book deal
« Reply #1914 on: May 26, 2024, 09:40:52 AM »
what waw it some million dollar book deal!

maybe she takes solace in this:

https://www.celebritynetworth.com/richest-politicians/democrats/sonia-sotomayor-net-worth/

I am not saying Justices should not be wealthy just that she is a hypocrite.

ccp

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Bill Clinton judge criticizes Justice Roberts
« Reply #1915 on: May 29, 2024, 06:55:51 AM »
" Tatel particularly criticizes Roberts’ opinions on race, including to eliminate voting rights protections, a core plank of America’s civil rights revolution. "


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/former-federal-judge-blasts-john-roberts-in-new-book-and-says-ruth-bader-ginsburg-was-annoyed-by-pressure-to-retire/ar-BB1nfl7O?ocid=msedgntp&pc=DCTS&cvid=e0ac8feefe584bca811da83602fccdd8&ei=16

Not sure what the hell he is talking about.
Since when cannot Black people vote?

NOT  mentioned is this from Wikipedia:

n October 2019, Tatel filed the majority opinion in Trump v. Mazars USA, LLP, finding that the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Reform had the authority to compel Mazars, via subpoena, to produce documents relating to the personal financial information of President Donald Trump, including several years' worth of income tax returns.[11] That decision was vacated and remanded, 7–2, by the Supreme Court in an opinion written by Chief Justice John Roberts on July 9, 2020.[12]

Just another partisan Democrat judge......

Body-by-Guinness

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SCOTUS Rules for the NRA in NY Free Speech Case
« Reply #1916 on: May 30, 2024, 04:22:35 PM »
Those despairing over over Trump’s conviction today in NY should be heartened by the ruling where another amok NY state attorney leaned on financial companies base in NY to stop doing business with the NRA. The Supreme Court rained all over that parade.

Indeed, given the lawfare we’ve been bearing witness to perhaps it’s time to start gaming out a way to deal with jurisdictions that convict Repubs for lawful behavior and acquit Dems for unlawful behavior. Perhaps upon so many reversals a change of venue is automatically made in certain jurisdictions? As noted before, I’m no lawyer, but I’ve little doubt the Founders would not be fans of seeing Blue cities warp the law as rural(er) red zones never see similar cases:

NRA Secures Landmark Legal Victory; Supreme Court Unanimously Rules for NRA in First Amendment Case Against Former New York Regulator

THURSDAY, MAY 30, 2024 NRA Secures Landmark Legal Victory; Supreme Court Unanimously Rules for NRA in First Amendment Case Against Former New York Regulator

The National Rifle Association of America (NRA) scored a historic legal victory today in one of the most closely followed First Amendment cases in the nation.

In a stinging rebuke of New York’s “blacklisting campaign” against the NRA, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled for the NRA in its case against former New York State Department of Financial Services Superintendent Maria T. Vullo. The decision remands the NRA’s case to the lower court – reviving the NRA’s claims that Vullo, at the behest of former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, violated the NRA’s First Amendment rights when she urged banks and insurers to cut ties with the NRA in 2018.

“This victory is a win for the NRA in the fight to protect freedom,” says NRA President Bob Barr. “This is a historic moment for the NRA in its stand against governmental overreach. Let this be clear: the voice of the NRA membership is as loud and influential as ever. Regulators are now on notice: this is a win for not only the NRA, but every organization who might otherwise suffer from an abuse of government power.”

The case was argued before the U.S. Supreme Court on March 18, 2024. The case is one of the most high-profile First Amendment cases in recent memory, with dozens of legal experts and constitutional scholars, including the ACLU, siding with the NRA.

“This is a moment of truth,” says NRA EVP & CEO Doug Hamlin. “The decision underscores the importance of this principled fight. When it comes to defending our members and their freedoms, the NRA will never back down.”

The opinion of the court, written by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, states, “Six decades ago, this Court held that a government entity’s ‘threat of invoking legal sanctions and other means of coercion’ against a third party ‘to achieve the suppression’ of disfavored speech violates the First Amendment… Today, the Court reaffirms what it said then: Government officials cannot attempt to coerce private parties in order to punish or suppress views that the government disfavors. Petitioner National Rifle Association (NRA) plausibly alleges that respondent Maria Vullo did just that.”

“This is a landmark victory for the NRA and all who care about our First Amendment freedom,” says William A. Brewer III, counsel to the NRA. “The opinion confirms what the NRA has known all along: New York government officials abused the power of their office to silence a political enemy. This is a victory for the NRA’s millions of members and the freedoms that define America.”

In the opinion, Justice Sotomayor writes that Vullo was “free to criticize the NRA” but “could not wield her power, however, to threaten enforcement actions against DFS-regulated entities in order to punish or suppress the NRA’s gun-promotion advocacy.”

Justice Sotomayor continues, “One can reasonably infer from the complaint that Vullo coerced DFS-regulated entities to cut their ties with the NRA in order to stifle the NRA’s gun-promotion advocacy and advance her views on gun control.”

The History of the Case

In a May 2018 lawsuit, the NRA alleged that Vullo, at the urging of Governor Cuomo, took aim at the NRA and conspired to use DFS’ regulatory power to “financially blacklist” the NRA – coercing banks and insurers to cut ties with the Association to suppress its pro-Second Amendment speech. The NRA argues that Vullo’s actions were meant to silence the NRA – using “guidance letters,” backroom threats, and other measures to cause financial institutions to “drop” the Association.

The NRA's First Amendment claims withstood multiple motions to dismiss. But in 2022, after Vullo appealed the trial court’s ruling, the Second Circuit struck down the NRA’s claims. The court ruled that in an era of “enhanced corporate social responsibility,” it was reasonable for New York's financial regulator to warn banks and insurance companies against servicing pro-gun groups based on the supposed “social backlash” against those groups’ advocacy. The court also ruled that Vullo’s guidance – written on her official letterhead and invoking her regulatory powers – was not a directive to the institutions she regulated, but rather a mere expression of her political preferences.

On February 7, 2023, the NRA petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court, seeking review of the Second Circuit decision. On November 3, 2023, the Court granted review of the case.

Twenty-two amicus briefs representing more than 190 individuals and organizations were filed in support of the NRA’s position, including a filing by several of the nation’s foremost First Amendment scholars. The amicus briefs also included a joint filing by dozens of congressional Republicans and filings by 25 state attorneys general. The support came from across the political spectrum.

On Monday, March 18, 2024, the Court heard oral arguments in the case. ACLU National Legal Director and NRA counsel David Cole argued that Vullo and other New York officials abused their authority in violation of the First Amendment, telling the justices: “There's no question on this record that they encouraged people to punish the NRA.” Cole said, “It was a campaign by the state’s highest political officials to use their power to coerce a boycott of a political advocacy organization because they disagreed with its advocacy.”

Eugene Volokh joined Brewer and the ACLU in representing the NRA, along with Brewer partners Sarah B. Rogers and Noah Peters.

ccp

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Due Process
« Reply #1917 on: June 03, 2024, 06:44:03 AM »
We have been hearing Mark Levin and Alan Dershowitz speak of violations of Due Process being applied to DJT.

So of course Jamie Raskin uses the same tactic against SCOTUS he does not like.

https://www.alternet.org/doj-alito-thomas/

PS:
Dershowitz stated knowing Larry (Lib Tribe) for decades said how he always would interpret the Constitution in a way favorable to crats.

And he can always somehow twist it [my words] in some way to do just that.



Body-by-Guinness

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X Asks SCOTUS to Rule on Fishing Expeditions
« Reply #1918 on: June 05, 2024, 11:25:02 AM »
Wants to be able to inform people when they are subject to collection efforts by law enforcment, Trump in this instance:

X Asks SCOTUS to Rule on Fishing Expeditions

X Corp. asks Supreme Court to review process that led Jack Smith to obtain Trump Twitter files
The social media company argues that a district judge ran afoul of the First Amendment when she ordered the company to turn over Trump’s data.
 The opening page of X is displayed on a computer and phone.
X Corp. is asking the justices to consider whether social media services can be forced to share data about their users with government investigators while being barred from informing those users about the requests. | Rick Rycroft/AP

By KYLE CHENEY
06/04/2024 02:08 PM EDT
Last year, federal courts in Washington, D.C. forced Elon Musk’s X Corp. to fork over reams of data from Donald Trump’s account to special counsel Jack Smith without telling Trump and giving him a chance to intervene.

Now the company is urging the Supreme Court to prevent such a scenario from unfolding again, a demand that could radically alter the way criminal investigators deploy secret search warrants and subpoenas for sensitive information.

X Corp. is asking the justices to consider whether social media services can be forced to share data about their users with government investigators while being barred from informing those users about the requests.
Trump’s material, the company noted, might have been subject to claims of executive privilege. But other users might have their own privileges to invoke, from attorneys to journalists to spouses.

In the case of Trump’s account, a federal district judge in Washington D.C., Beryl Howell, rejected X Corp.’s protestations and endorsed a so-called “nondisclosure order” that barred the company from informing Trump about Smith’s subpoena. She reasoned that prosecutors had presented evidence that informing Trump could endanger the information and cause risks to Smith’s probe.

In February 2023, Howell held the company, which Musk had recently purchased, in contempt for dragging its feet on producing the material. The judge fined the company $350,000. And she wondered aloud whether Musk was impeding Smith’s investigation to ingratiate himself to the former president.

The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals supported Howell’s decision, but the court’s four conservatives wrote a blistering opinion criticizing the ruling for permitting prosecutors to evade a potential executive privilege fight.

X Corp., represented by prominent attorneys from WilmerHale, contended that the D.C. courts’ decisions failed to protect the company’s First Amendment right to communicate with its customers.

Smith has already obtained voluminous data from Trump’s account, a component of his effort to pinpoint Trump’s actions in the key weeks leading up to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. But X Corp. says the legal issue at the heart of its Supreme Court petition is likely to recur. In fact, the company is mounting a similar battle against nondisclosure orders in an investigation that was made public earlier this year by Chief U.S. District Judge James Boasberg, who similarly ruled against the company.

https://www.politico.com/news/2024/06/04/x-supreme-court-jack-smith-trump-twitter-files-00161521

ccp

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woman who secretly recorded Justice Alito conversation
« Reply #1919 on: June 11, 2024, 06:55:44 AM »
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauren_Windsor

can anyone imagine private conversations among the liberal Justices?

you are going to tell me they would not hold opposite political beliefs?


Crafty_Dog

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Sen. McConnell:
« Reply #1920 on: June 12, 2024, 09:53:36 AM »
Mitch McConnell: Liberal Bureaucrats Threaten Democracy
The administrative state thwarts the Constitution’s structure for keeping officials accountable.
By Mitch McConnell
June 11, 2024 12:45 pm ET


Democrats like to say that “democracy is at stake” in November. That may be true, but not in the way they think. Across all three branches of the federal government, liberals are working to undermine democratic accountability over their exercise of power. Their philosophy of the administrative state has one unifying thread: the abrogation of democratic legitimacy in deference to unelected bureaucrats.

Let’s start with the Supreme Court. I recently took two of my colleagues to task for improperly interfering in litigation by demanding that Chief Justice John Roberts force Justice Samuel Alito to recuse himself from cases they didn’t want him to hear. As the court has maintained for decades, recusal is a judicial act. It isn’t, as Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D., R.I.) said in response to my criticisms, “an administrative matter.”

This misunderstanding suffuses efforts to force ethics “reform” on the high court. Liberals complain that the court’s binding ethics rules lack an “enforcement mechanism” to ensure recusal when they want it. But this complaint would throw the Constitution out the window.

Article III vests “the judicial power” in the court, not in some novel administrative body or committee. It is therefore up to the justices, appointed by the president with the Senate’s advice and consent, to decide whether and how to hear cases.

In other words, the court rightly vests judicial power in its democratically legitimate members as the Constitution requires. Democrats instead want a bureaucracy to “administer” it.

This misbegotten trust in bureaucrats also undermines democratic legitimacy in the executive branch. Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed three different “special counsels” who operate outside the normal chain of command at the Justice Department to ensure prosecutorial “independence.”

I don’t doubt Mr. Garland’s sincerity that moving prosecutors outside the chain of command makes them “independent.” The problem is the underlying assumption that prosecutors should be independent at all. Such an arrangement insulates them from democratic accountability.

The president is the sole repository of “the executive power” under Article II. When it comes to prosecutions, that power is exercised through an attorney general who is selected by the president and subject to Senate confirmation.

What gives federal prosecution legitimacy is that it is vested in an elected branch of government. Up and down the chain of command in the Justice Department, decisions are, and should be, made by people responsive to the president and Senate.

It might seem that prosecutions with acute political consequences would challenge this legitimacy. The solution, however, isn’t to outsource the political decisions to a prosecutorial bureaucrat. The buck stops with the attorney general because he, through the president, is accountable to voters. Liberals seem to struggle with this reality.

Unfortunately, we see this dynamic in the legislative branch, too. Soon, in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, the Supreme Court will address the problem of Chevron deference, the idea that if a federal agency argues a statute is “ambiguous” it can fill in the legislative blanks.

Former Solicitor General Paul Clement observed during oral argument that while Chevron deference might have been well-intended when the court adopted it in 1984, in practice it has given Congress an incentive to leave the hard work of legislating to bureaucrats.

Article I, in contrast, entrusts Congress with “all legislative power.” As with the president’s executive power and the Supreme Court’s judicial power, only Congress has legislative power. And yet for decades, Congress has been content to outsource that power to an administrative state that relies on Chevron to defend its power grabs in court. This is why I filed a brief in support of overturning Chevron deference.

Liberals disagree. Mr. Whitehouse also filed a brief and, consistent with his view that bureaucrats should usurp the judicial power, argued that they should continue to usurp the legislative power too. You see, “the purported ‘problem’ ”—Chevron deference—“is actually a value for the general public.”

The Constitution vests each branch of the federal government with an exclusive power, responsive to the people in elections. In each branch, liberals seek to remove that power from democratic accountability and vest it in unelected bureaucrats. This practice might come from a good-faith trust in “experts,” or a sincere belief that sound policy is too valuable to risk in elections. But at its core, it is a rejection of democratic accountability in favor of the administrative state.

I, for one, think we should continue working to reinforce the Constitution and the trust it places in the American people.

Mr. McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, is Senate minority leader.


Body-by-Guinness

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Docs Against Glocks Nock Loss
« Reply #1922 on: June 14, 2024, 11:25:00 AM »
Those seeking to abrogate constitutional protections by extra-constitutional means are forever seeking ways to nickel, dime, and hassle law abiding gun owners, retailers, and manufacturers (ORM). In this instance “Docs agains Glocks” sought standing so they could bring action against ORMs; Kavanaugh shot them down:

Justice Kavanaugh Denies Standing For Docs Against Glocks
The Volokh Conspiracy / by Josh Blackman / Jun 13, 2024 at 9:16 PM
[Doctors cannot claim an injury to challenge gun control laws because their patients may be affected by gun violence.]

In 2011, Florida enacted a law that restricted when doctors could ask their patients if they owned a gun. The sentiment behind the law was that doctors, as a whole, were hostile to gun rights, and could not be trusted with this power. The so-called Docs v. Glocks law, however, did not survive. In 2017, the en banc Eleventh Circuit ruled that the law violated the First Amendment and violated Due Process (there were two majority opinions).

I thought of that case today while re-reading Justice Kavanaugh's standing analysis in FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine. Imagine that some doctors who are hostile to gun rights sought standing to challenge some sort of gun control policy. The basis of their injury would be that with fewer restrictions on firearms, their patients are more likely to show up in the emergency room. I'm sure elite medical journals could pump out studies showing how that is a predictable, non-attenuated chain of consequences. That argument might have worked yesterday. But not today. AHM slammed that door shut:

In any event, and perhaps more to the point, the law has never permitted doctors to challenge the government's loosening of general public safety requirements simply because more individuals might then show up at emergency rooms or in doctors' offices with follow-on injuries. Stated otherwise, there is no Article III doctrine of "doctor standing" that allows doctors to challenge general government safety regulations. Nor will this Court now create such a novel standing doctrine out of whole cloth.

Consider some examples. . . . The government repeals certain restrictions on guns—does a surgeon have standing to sue because he might have to operate on more gunshot victims? The answer is no: The chain of causation is simply too attenuated. Allowing doctors or other healthcare providers to challenge general safety regulations as unlawfully lax would be an unprecedented and limitless approach and would allow doctors to sue in federal court to challenge almost any policy affecting public health.4

I don't know if Justice Kavanaugh was thinking about Docs v. Glocks. But he is wont to reach out to decide issues that are not present. And I think this path for standing is foreclosed.

The post Justice Kavanaugh Denies Standing For Docs Against Glocks appeared first on Reason.com.

https://reason.com/volokh/2024/06/13/justice-kavanaugh-denies-standing-for-docs-against-glocks/





DougMacG

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Constitutional Law SCOTUS, Alito Murthy dissent
« Reply #1927 on: June 27, 2024, 11:36:21 AM »
From Alito's dissent:

For months in 2021 and 2022, a coterie of officials at the highest levels of the Federal Government continuously harried and implicitly threatened Facebook with potentially crippling consequences if it did not comply with their wishes about the suppression of certain COVID–19-related speech. Facebook repeatedly yielded. As a result Hines [the plaintiff] was indisputably injured, and due to the officials' continuing efforts, she was threatened with more of the same when she brought suit.

These past and threatened future injuries were caused by and traceable to censorship that the officials coerced….

We are obligated to tackle the free speech issue that the case presents. The Court, however, shirks that duty and thus permits the successful campaign of coercion in this case to stand as an attractive model for future officials who want to control what the people say, hear, and think

Because of the perpetrators' high positions [in government], it was even more dangerous. It was blatantly unconstitutional, and the country may come to regret the Court's failure to say so.

The Biden administration can now act with a free hand in pressuring social media companies to censor speech.

This is a ruling that sanctions government tyranny

DougMacG

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Re: here is breakdown of 6-3 vote
« Reply #1928 on: June 27, 2024, 11:50:54 AM »
https://www.vox.com/scotus/357111/supreme-court-murthy-missouri-fifth-circuit-jawboning-first-amendment


Unsurprising once I saw the vote was 6-3 on the wrong side.  There was an article or analysis recently that said the Court is not split 6-3 with a conservative majority.  The Court is divided 3-3-3.  Three liberals on the Left, then Roberts, Kavanaugh and Barrett in the so-called middle and the Gorsuch, Alito, Thomas on the right.  The group that stuck together the most was not the right or the left, it was the middle.


DougMacG

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Constitutional Law, SCOTUS, Jarkesy
« Reply #1930 on: June 28, 2024, 08:55:23 AM »
I think this is the Chevron case decision summary:  Correction: The case that strikes down Chevron. (?)

DON SURBER ON YESTERDAY’S SEC DECISION: Americans 6, Deep State 3.

hat tip Instapundit.

https://donsurber.substack.com/p/americans-6-deep-state-3?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=1115457&post_id=146056127&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=false&r=9bg2k&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email
--------------------------------------------------------

Vox said, “The Supreme Court just lit a match and tossed it into dozens of federal agencies. SEC v. Jarkesy could render much of the federal government unable to function
https://www.vox.com/scotus/357554/supreme-court-sec-jarkesy-roberts-sotomayor-chaos
« Last Edit: June 28, 2024, 09:01:18 AM by DougMacG »

Body-by-Guinness

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The 25th Amendment & the Biden Presidency
« Reply #1931 on: July 04, 2024, 06:51:27 PM »
An examination of what it would take to invoke the 25th amendment to unseat Biden. Nut graf: fat chance:

Dealing with Your Aging President

Cato @ Liberty / by Gene Healy / Jul 3, 2024 at 4:34 PM

Gene Healy

I’m just old enough to remember when people worried that a then-73-year-old Ronald Reagan was too befuddled to serve after he had a couple of “senior moments” in his first debate with Walter Mondale in 1984. If Reagan’s brief lapses were concerning, President Biden’s “senior 90 minutes”—his tragic, shambolic debate performance last Thursday—was a blaring alarm bell. Score one for the Cassandras of national decline.

Bidens
“There’s a lot of people asking about the 25th Amendment,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said on Friday, “because this is an alarming situation.” And when people are asking about the 25th Amendment, it usually falls to me, as Cato’s resident 25th Amendment guy, to explain why it’s probably not going to happen. I did that on Friday’s Cato Daily Podcast, and I’ll do it again here: It’s probably not going to happen.

The 25th Amendment, ratified in 1967, was drafted in the wake of the Kennedy assassination. That grisly event highlighted the potential problem of presidential incapacity; what if, “instead of being mortally wounded, [JFK] had lingered for a long time between life and death, strong enough to survive but too weak to govern”?

The amendment’s drafters provided a potential remedy in Section 4. That provision allows the VP to take the keys away from the president when she and a majority of the Cabinet decide he is “unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.” But when you look at how Section 4 works, you can appreciate why it’s unlikely to work as a means of getting Democrats out of their current predicament (much less the rest of the country out of ours).

Under Section 4, the vice president and a majority of Cabinet heads make the initial disability determination and notify Congress, at which point, “the Vice President shall immediately assume the powers and duties of the office as Acting President.” If the president challenges that determination, the question goes to Congress, and if two-thirds of both chambers ratify the switch, the vice president continues to serve as “Acting President.”

But as a practical matter, unless a supermajority of both houses affirms the decision, all triggering Section 4 does is put the president in a temporary timeout. As Sen. Birch Bayh (D‑IN), one of the amendment’s principal architects, explained: “[W]e were concerned about the politics of the palace coup,” so they deliberately set a higher bar than what’s required for removing the president via the impeachment process (which has also never happened).

Thus, even if Vice President Kamala Harris likes her odds and manages to coax along a Cabinet majority with enticing visions of “what can be, unburdened by what has been,” it’s all for naught unless she can muster the votes in Congress to make it stick.

Speaking of national decline, I’m also old enough to remember when people genuinely worried that Vice President Dan Quayle was too much of an airhead to be safely placed a “heartbeat away” from the presidency. There’s no way to put this politely, but Kamala Harris is almost as incoherent and rambling as President Biden, without the excuse of age. Would enough congressional Democrats favor a 25th Amendment solution that makes Harris the incumbent president and presumptive nominee? That’s not clear at this point, though recent polls that show her outperforming Biden may make that option more attractive.

But, given those polls, would enough congressional Republicans prove public-spirited enough to swap out a demonstrably feeble opponent just because the country might require a president who can be “dependably engaged” outside the hours of 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.? If not, Biden “resume(s) the powers and duties of his office.”

All plausible paths to a new Democratic nominee, whether Harris or someone else, involve President Biden stepping down voluntarily, as LBJ did in 1968. You’d like to think there was a point to Thursday’s cruel spectacle: that it was part of a plan toward convincing the president to withdraw. It’s possible to imagine a strategy session among the president’s handlers analogous to the following: “We all know that Dad really shouldn’t be driving anymore, but he’s not going to give up the keys unless he has an accident. So before we can have that difficult conversation, we’re going to have to let him crash the car. Let’s hope nobody gets hurt!” My guess is that there was no actual method to the madness, however. The Biden team stood him up hoping he’d muddle through. It didn’t work.

Looking beyond the 2024 horse race, this whole appalling episode brings three problems with the modern presidential system into stark relief. First, on both sides of the aisle, our primary-governed nomination process is a disaster, routinely elevating candidates who are unfit for office. When we pick people for the presidency, we’re not sending our best. Second, once presidents have assumed office, they’re far too hard to dislodge. In parliamentary regimes, “prime ministers may be removed at any time when Parliament is in session through a nonconfidence motion”; weak leaders can even be dumped by their own party without bringing down the government. In contrast, we Americans seem to be stuck with an elected pseudo-monarch, all but impossible to dethrone between four-year terms. Third, and most concerning, the modern president wields far more power than any one fallible human being ought to have.

All three are daunting problems, resistant to reform. Even if it were achievable, fixing the primary process wouldn’t help us right now, and lowering the bar to presidential removal would require a constitutional amendment. The “easiest” of the three, re-limiting presidential power, is still an extraordinarily heavy lift. But last Thursday’s debate is only the latest reminder of our urgent need to make the effort.

https://www.cato.org/blog/dealing-aging-president
« Last Edit: July 05, 2024, 06:59:53 PM by Body-by-Guinness »

ccp

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"I’m just old enough to remember when people worried that a then-73-year-old Ronald Reagan was too befuddled to serve after he had a couple of “senior moments” in his first debate with Walter Mondale in 1984."

so am I but I don't remember any "senior moments" in any debate with Mondale or anyone else.

I do remember late in his term images of him nodding off at times and rumors he was becoming a noticeable forgetful but nothing like Biden till after he was President.

He was able to deliver his Golden City on a Shining Hill speech at the end of his final term.

Crafty_Dog

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WT: Justice Barrett
« Reply #1933 on: July 08, 2024, 04:03:35 AM »
Barrett takes surprising turn, stakes out middle ground in fourth term

BY ALEX SWOYER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

As Amy Coney Barrett sat for her confirmation hearing in 2020, liberal activists paraded around the U.S. Capitol dressed in robes from the dystopian streaming series “The Handmaid’s Tale,” and the Senate Democratic leader accused her of holding “far-right views.”

Now, in her fourth term on the high court, Justice Barrett is surprising legal analysts with her willingness to forge a different path from the court’s most conservative members.

She broke from other Republican appointees last month on the government’s prosecution of Jan. 6 defendants and refused to go as far on granting immunity to presidents. “I think she was never that conservative to begin with,” said Josh Blackman, a professor at South Texas College of Law who has closely watched Justice Barrett’s opinions this term.

She often sides with the other Republican appointees but writes her own opinions describing how she arrived at her conclusions. Sometimes, she vehemently disagrees with conservative giants such as Justice Clarence Thomas.

Adam Feldman, a Supreme Court scholar who tracks trends at his “Empirical SCOTUS” blog, said Justice Barrett was more on the right in her early days as a justice when she joined the 2022 opinion that overturned Roe v. Wade.

Now, she “probably falls somewhere in the middle of the court,” Mr. Feldman said.

“It’s not exactly the same justice who was so clearly in the majority in Dobbs,” he said. “We are seeing a little bit of distance between her and Thomas.

Warnings from 2020 of a dystopian future with “far-right views” of Justice Amy Coney Barrett on the Supreme Court have not panned out.

ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOGRAPHS

Barrett

In other cases, between her and [Justice Samuel A.] Alito. I think she is probably a little bit more moderate, the extent to which we don’t truly know yet.”

Her dissent in Fischer v. United States has drawn attention. She led two Democratic appointees, Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, in voting to approve the Justice Department’s attempt to use an Enronera document-shredding law against protesters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

It’s her writings, even those that agree with the court’s conservative majority, that are drawing the most scrutiny.

She signed on to the historic case granting former President Donald Trump some immunity from criminal prosecution for his actions in office but said her Republican colleagues should have given less restraint to what prosecutions could be brought.

“The Constitution does not insulate Presidents from criminal liability for official acts. But any statute regulating the exercise of executive power is subject to a constitutional challenge,” she wrote. “A criminal statute is no exception. Thus, a President facing prosecution may challenge the constitutionality of a criminal statute as applied to official acts alleged in the indictment. If that challenge fails, however, he must stand trial.”

In an earlier Trump-related decision, she signed on to a ruling that Colorado was wrong to disqualify the former president from its ballot but chided her fellow Republican appointees for going beyond that limited reasoning.

In United States v. Rahimi, a key ruling this year on gun rights, she joined the majority in finding that the Second Amendment allows someone under a domestic violence protection order to be stripped of firearms, at least temporarily. Only Justice Thomas dissented.

Mr. Blackman noted that Justice Barrett’s concurring opinion seemed to question the prevailing theory of originalism, one of the defining conservative legal approaches.

“So, for an originalist, the history that matters most is the history surrounding the ratification of the text; that backdrop illuminates the meaning of the enacted law. History (or tradition) that long postdates ratification does not serve that function,” she wrote.

Mr. Blackman said Justice Barrett demands a higher bar regarding history and tradition, sometimes putting her on different sides in rulings from other Republican appointees.

“I think her mode is one of judicial restraint. I think she approaches cases with caution and hesitancy, and she will scrutinize standing, she will scrutinize all the facts, she will hold the lawyers to a very high burden,” he said.

“She is so afraid of getting something wrong that she won’t be an originalist,” he said.

Others see it differently. Eugene Volokh, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, wrote on his conservative legal blog, “Volokh Conspiracy,” that Justice Barrett’s opinion on the gun decision “reaffirms her originalist approach.”

Elliot Mincberg, senior fellow at People for the American Way, which opposed Justice Barrett’s nomination as too extreme, said she still sides with the conservative majority in high-profile cases.

“She clearly is extremely conservative, but does see certain areas where some members of the court go too far,” Mr. Mincberg said. “I think that she may be a tad more independent in some ways than some people thought she was going to be. How that plays out in future cases depends on what those cases are.”

Mr. Trump nominated Justice Barrett to the court in the fall of 2020 after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Her nomination, the third of the Trump administration, enraged Democrats, who said it should have been delayed until after the election. They also worried that she would tilt the court’s balance far to the right and compared her to Justice Antonin Scalia, the late conservative stalwart.

She discounted those comparisons.

“If I were confirmed, you’d be getting Justice Barrett, not Justice Scalia,” she told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

No Democratic senator supported her nomination.

“The dogma lives loudly within you,” said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, California Democrat.

Before joining the Supreme Court, Justice Barrett briefly served on the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Since 2001, she has spent most of her legal career as a law professor at a few universities. Shortly after graduating from law school, Justice Barrett clerked for Justice Scalia and briefly worked in private practice for a few years.

“She is reading a brief like a law school exam,” Mr. Blackman said of her approach to cases.

With six Republican and three Democratic appointees on the court, legal scholars have pondered where the center lies now.

In his end-of-year statistical report on the term, Mr. Feldman said Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh were the two who agreed with each other the most while voting in the majority, which he said reveals they are “really at the front of the court’s business.”

They were also the ones with whom Justice Barrett most often agreed among her colleagues. She agreed with Chief Justice Roberts 88% of the time and with Justice Kavanaugh 89% of the time.

She agreed with the three Democratic appointees slightly less than 70% of the time


Body-by-Guinness

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To Those Wigging Out About Trump v. US, Take a Chill Pill
« Reply #1935 on: July 10, 2024, 07:22:35 PM »
I’ve seen my share of aghast expressions re this case, including at Reason. I think this entry, though, is closer to the correct perspective:

Everyone Needs To Take A Deep Breath About Trump v. United States

The Volokh Conspiracy / by Josh Blackman / Jul 10, 2024 at 9:35 AM

[No one asked the Court to reverse Nixon v. Fitzgerald. And the Court found that the civil and criminal contexts cannot be distinguished. The decision should not have been a surprise.]

In the aftermath of Trump v. United States, I wrote a series of posts breaking down most facets of the opinion as a doctrinal matter (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8). My general impression is that the decision was not premised on original public meaning, but was a mishmash of precedent, pragmatism, and "traditionalism." Yet the reaction was one of stunned outrage! It is the next Roe v. Wade. We need a constitutional amendment to overrule it. We need to pack the Supreme Court! And so on.

Never forget, most commentary about the Supreme Court is performative. Critics have a vested interest in making the decisions seem so much worse than they really are. There really should not have been much of a surprise here.

First, Nixon v. Fitzgerald has been on the books for decades. That decision established absolute civil immunity for all acts within the "outer perimeter" of the President's duties. No one asked the Court to reconsider Nixon, so that was precedent. During oral argument, Justices Jackson and Sotomayor repeatedly tried to explain why civil immunity made sense, but criminal immunity did not. But the majority disagreed. Critically, the Court found that it would make no sense to provide immunity for civil suits, but not for criminal prosecutions. Indeed, as I noted, the risks from a criminal prosecution of the President are greater than the risk of a civil lawsuit. One the Court declined to distinguish civil and criminal suits, it follows naturally that the absolute immunity recognized in Nixon would apply in the criminal context for Trump. None of this should be surprising.

Second, once the Court recognized that there would be absolute immunity for "core" powers, and presumptive immunity for other actions, the Court had to adopt some test. The Fitzgerald Court's "outer perimeter" test was never particularly unhelpful. Instead, Chief Justice Roberts borrowed from Blasingame v. Trump, a precedent from the D.C. Circuit. This case involved a civil suit against President Trump for his role on January 6:

For those reasons, the immunity we have recognized extends to the "outer perimeter" of the President's official responsibilities, covering actions so long as they are "not manifestly or palpably beyond [his] authority." Blassingame v. Trump, 87 F. 4th 1, 13 (CADC 2023) (internal quotation marks omitted); see Fitzgerald, 457 U. S., at 755–756 (noting that we have "refused to draw functional lines finer than history and reason would support").

Given Fitzgerald, and how the lower courts have applied Fitzgerald, the Court was going to have to apply some sort of test to determine immunity. The Court gave some guidance to the lower courts. I don't know how helpful it will be, but the Court here was treading in uncertain territory. Is the framework so unreasonable?

Third, I think most of the critics of the decision still believe that the law can constrain a populist presidential candidate. It can't. Alvin Bragg, Jack Smith, Fani Willis, and so on. None of them have made a dent on Trump. The WSJ summed things up nicely:

None of this is a vindication of Mr. Trump's conduct or an endorsement of paying off a porn star, trying to overturn the 2020 election, or refusing to help a besieged Congress on Jan. 6. But as the past nine years have shown over and over, Mr. Trump's biggest opponents are often his best asset. They convinced themselves he won in 2016 by colluding with Russia, and special counsel Robert Mueller would get to the bottom of it. They impeached him twice. Mr. Trump plowed through it all.

It is a fantasy to believe that any test that Chief Justice Roberts could make up would control this president or any other. The law only goes so far.

Everyone should take a deep breath. The only way to defeat Trump is at the ballot box. That was true in 2016. That was true in 2020. And it will be true in 2024.

https://reason.com/volokh/2024/07/10/everyone-needs-to-take-a-deep-breath-about-trump-v-united-states/

ccp

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Coulter on the 3 libs on the Court
« Reply #1936 on: July 11, 2024, 06:27:33 AM »
On the City of Grants Pass v. Johnson lib dissenters:

https://anncoulter.com/2024/07/10/scotus-girls-gone-wild-the-right-to-crap-in-the-streets/

I thought this part is notable:

"It seems relevant at this juncture to recall that Harvard Law professor Larry Tribe warned President Barack Obama that Sotomayor is “not nearly as smart as she seems to think she is.”

ccp

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second post
« Reply #1937 on: July 11, 2024, 06:42:32 AM »
speaking of Larry Lib:

more DNC interpretation twists on Court rulings on MSDNC:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/a-recipe-for-autocracy-laurence-tribe-torches-supreme-court-immunity-ruling/vi-BB1pf9Gg?ocid=msedgntp&pc=DCTS&cvid=52d866d2cc6f40398d7fa143b938f84c&ei=110

I feel the danger to Democracy are Democrat partisan professors, not Donald Trump.
They are the ones behind a lot of this and look at our country as a result.
It is turning to modern Marxism.


Body-by-Guinness

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More on Trump v. US: Good Riddance to Special Prosecutors
« Reply #1939 on: July 12, 2024, 06:54:41 AM »


[Josh Blackman] Bauer: "[T]here's little point left to [the Special Counsel] regulations, at least insofar as they purport to authorize investigations of presidents."

The Volokh Conspiracy / by Josh Blackman / Jul 12, 2024 at 3:07 AM

[Good riddance to special counsel investigations of the President. ]

Earlier this week, I revisited the Mueller investigation in light of Trump v. United States. My conclusion: the entire basis of the investigation would have been void in light of the Court's decision. Virtually everything that triggered Mueller's appointment was a "core" presidential power. Moreover, nearly the entirety of the investigation probed Trump to determine whether he had "corrupt" motives–an inquiry that Chief Justice Roberts's decision foreclosed. In hindsight, this investigation should have never happened. I think we would have been all better off without that colossal waste of time.

Going forward, do the special counsel regulations have any vestigial role with regard to investigations of the President? I think the answer has to be no. And agreeing with me is Bob Bauer.

At Lawfare, Bauer explains that his thinking on this issue has changed since Trump v. United States–a decision he vigorously disagrees with on many levels:

Jack Goldsmith, my co-author of "After Trump: Reconstructing the Presidency," and I have written about and proposed reforms to the special counsel regulations pursuant to which the department may conduct criminal investigations of the president. Goldsmith has since argued that the regulations have proved to be a failure, attempts at reform will fail, and the rules ought to be withdrawn. He made his case by appeal to experience. I did not agree. I have had second thoughts and now conclude that, after the Supreme Court immunity decision, there's little point left to these regulations, at least insofar as they purport to authorize investigations of presidents. Perhaps they could remain in place for cases involving other senior administration officials, but it is not obvious why, once on the chopping block, any piece of them survives.

The Archibald Coxes, the Leon Jaworskis, the Robert Muellers, the Jack Smiths: We may never see the likes of them again.

Bauer is nostalgic for Mueller and Smith. I say good riddance. The concept that prosecution can be divorced from politics was always a fantasy. Justice Scalia's dissent in Morrison has gone unanswered for nearly three decades. He was right.

It is true that the special counsel regulations remain on the books for lower-ranking officials. And I agree with Zach Price that it will be very hard for the President to do much mischief without the help of subordinates who lack immunity. But we should not pretend that some "independent" prosecutor can perform any meaningful function.

The post Bauer: "[T]here's little point left to [the Special Counsel] regulations, at least insofar as they purport to authorize investigations of presidents." appeared first on Reason.com.

https://reason.com/volokh/2024/07/12/bauer-theres-little-point-left-to-the-special-counsel-regulations-at-least-insofar-as-they-purport-to-authorize-investigations-of-presidents/


Body-by-Guinness

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9th Circuit Rules Covid Jab NOT a Vaccine w/ Potential Large Implication
« Reply #1941 on: July 13, 2024, 12:28:25 PM »
9th circuit (!?!) ruling with potentially a large impact where the Covid vaccine and mandatory jabs are concerned. I had a couple mandatory vaccines myself as I was working in potentially hands on youth protection at the time and so will be tracking this case and its fallout closely:

July 12, 2024

The Ninth Circuit shoots down COVID vaccine

By Pete Colan

The COVID shot was put on trial in the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and coming from California the result might surprise you.  Three of four judges agree it was never a “traditional vaccine” and therefore could not legally be mandated.

The case was against the Los Angeles Unified School District (“LAUSD”) that “required employees to get the COVID-19 vaccination or lose their jobs.”  While this case was making its way thru the courts, LAUSD was playing Hokey-Pokey with their policy on “vaccination” which didn’t play well in their litigation strategy, as it allowed the case to be kept alive rather than becoming moot.

Plaintiffs argued that in “Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905), in concluding that the Policy survived rational basis review. Jacobson held that mandatory vaccinations were rationally related to preventing the spread of smallpox. Here, however, plaintiffs allege that the vaccine does not effectively prevent spread but only mitigates symptoms for the recipient and therefore is akin to a medical treatment, not a “traditional” vaccine. Taking plaintiffs’ allegations as true at this stage of litigation, plaintiffs plausibly alleged that the COVID-19 vaccine does not effectively “prevent the spread” of COVID-19. Thus, Jacobson does not apply.”

Further, the Ninth Circuit Court observed “Pursuant to more recent Supreme Court authority, compulsory treatment for the health benefit of the person treated -- as opposed to compulsory treatment for the health benefit of others -- implicates the fundamental right to refuse medical treatment.”

LAUSD argued, basically, (my words) “we didn’t know any better so” (their words) “[t]he science [on vaccines] has not changed” and they are still “safe and effective.”

In its final ruling, the court decided “At this stage, we must accept Plaintiffs’ allegations that the vaccine does not prevent the spread of COVID-19 as true… And, because of this, Jacobson does not apply. LAUSD cannot get around this standard by stating that Plaintiffs’ allegations are wrong. Nor can LAUSD do so by providing facts that do not contradict Plaintiffs’ allegations... But even if the materials offered by LAUSD are subject to judicial notice, they do not support rejecting Plaintiffs’ allegations. LAUSD only provides a CDC publication that says “COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective.” But “safe and effective” for what? LAUSD implies that it is for preventing transmission of COVID-19 but does not adduce judicially noticeable facts that prove this.”

According to America’s Frontline Doctors this is a bigger deal than one might think because “Liability protection under U.S. law is granted only to valid vaccines. The CDC and pharmaceutical companies were fully aware of this critical distinction when they changed the definition of “vaccine” in 2021 to include mRNA shots.” 

Could immunity from liability of Big Pharma be challenged on the basis of this decision by the Ninth Circuit? Personally, I hope so.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/07/the_ninth_circuit_shoots_down_covid_vaccine.html

ccp

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Biden to propose increasing number of Court Justices
« Reply #1942 on: July 17, 2024, 06:07:05 AM »
"I’ve been working with constitutional scholars for the last three months,"

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/ar-BB1q6pbz

Gee I wonder which IVY league lib democrat partisan attorneys that would be?
I know of one for sure.   :wink:

Let's see Yale , Harvard, Columbia, NYU .

I don't know who these unelected little shits think they are.


Crafty_Dog

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Tossing this out there as a last minute flailing Hail Mary is an eloquent expression of contempt for our C'l Republic.

ccp

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Legalize language on SCOTUS justice term limits
« Reply #1944 on: July 17, 2024, 10:25:24 AM »
https://constitutioncenter.org/blog/constitution-check-did-the-founders-want-term-limits-for-supreme-court-just

be interesting to hear what Turley ,  Dersh and Levin have to say about this.

we know what larry lib will say .

Body-by-Guinness

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A Review of Cannon’s Opinion in US . Trump
« Reply #1945 on: July 19, 2024, 06:54:29 PM »
Analysis of Judge Cannons opinion declaring the special counsel statute unconstitutional:

Judge Aileen Cannon's Opinion in U.S. v. Trump
The Volokh Conspiracy / by Steven Calabresi / Jul 19, 2024 at 9:16 PM
[My thoughts on this opinion.]

After an incredibly busy week, I finally had time today to read carefully Judge Aileen Cannon's opinion in United States v. Trump. I thought it was excellent, indeed better than most Supreme Court opinions on the Appointments Clauses (although entirely consistent with those opinions). I might be biased given that Judge Cannon's opinion cited Gary Lawson's and my law review article on this topic, but she went way beyond that article. President Trump of course was also biased in calling her wise and brave, but in this instance I think he was correct.

Here is the heart of the question that Judge Cannon was considering: Has Congress delegated to the Attorney General either the power to create inferior officers or the power to create the office of Special Counsel, which Jack Smith fills? In her very detailed and textualist opinion, Judge Cannon persuasively shows that the answer is "no."

Judge Cannon's opinion shows that each Section of the U.S. Code, which Smith relied on, neither delegates to the Attorney General the power two create inferior offices, nor does it create the office of the Special Counsel. Her argument is irrefutable. I have yet to read a response to her opinion that is remotely as persuasive as the opinion itself.

Judge Cannon also discusses, but does not decide whether an office like the office of Special Counsel, if it existed, would be a Principle or Inferior Office for Appointments Clause purposes. Her discussion of that issue is good as any judicial opinion since one written by Justice David Souter concurring in Edmond v. United States, 520 U.S. 651 (1997).

In addition, Judge Cannon discusses what I think is a very serious Appropriations Power issue in the case. She quite rightly concludes that the Justice Department should lose on both grounds, but she correctly relies only on the Inferior Office Appointments Clause and the statutory arguments before her as deciding the case.

Gary Lawson and I argued in Why Robert Mueller's Appointment as Special Council, 95 Notre Dame Law Review 87 (2019), that the "Department of Justice should write a new regulation, replacing the 1999 Janet Reno Regulations, specifying that, in the future special counsels shall be appointed from among the ranks of the permanently appointed U.S. Attorneys."

This would give an Attorney General a list of up to 93 names from which she or he could appoint a Special Counsel.  All of the people on that list are Senate-confirmed officers of the United States who could be given the additional power of prosecuting a case outside of their own districts.

Democrats who are concerned by Judge Cannon's opinion should ask themselves how they would feel, if an Attorney General appointed by a second term President Trump, had the power to create an unlimited number of Special Counsels all of whom were inferior officers as powerful as is Jack Smith?

Sadly, instead of doing that, Attorney General Merrick Garland, a former D.C. Circuit Judge, has chosen to appeal Judge Cannon's ruling to the Eleventh Circuit.

He has done this with no acknowledgment of the dangers that the Janet Reno regulations pose to the separation of powers or to the system of checks and balances, which the Constitution creates.

The post Judge Aileen Cannon's Opinion in U.S. v. Trump appeared first on Reason.com.

https://reason.com/volokh/2024/07/19/judge-aileen-cannons-opinion-in-u-s-v-trump/

Body-by-Guinness

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Lower Court Judges to Enforce Conduct Code Against SCOTUS?
« Reply #1946 on: July 28, 2024, 06:26:50 PM »
I was not aware this had happened to Cannon already and can certainly see how this would cause the SCOTUS to grind to a halt:

[Josh Blackman] What Would It Mean For Lower Federal Court Judges To Enforce A Code Of Conduct Against Supreme Court Justices?
Kagan calls for ethics code enforcement

•The Volokh Conspiracy / by Josh Blackman / Jul 28, 2024 at 7:59 PM
[Does Justice Kagan really want Chief Judge Kimberly Moore to give Justice Thomas the Pauline Newman treatment?]

When Justice Kagan speaks to the Ninth Circuit judicial conference, after cutting through all the pleasantries and bromides, her primary objective is to give the left a to-do list. She doesn't sob in her office. She punches through walls. This year, Kagan casually floated an idea that has taken shape: Justice John Roberts could appoint some panel of "judges lower down the food chain" to review allegations of misconduct.

As a threshold matter, she threw Justice Thomas under his RV, and raised Justice Alito up his flagpole. Not even a year after the Court adopted an ethics code–which was part of Kagan's earlier wish-list–Kagan is already saying that the rules are not enough. There have to be teeth!

I'll repeat a few points I've made more times than I can count. Ethics codes are not bright-line rules. They merely offer guidance to judges about how to proceed. All federal judges, even the Justices, can request informal advice from their colleagues, or judges on other courts. Though not binding, judges tend to do what others have done. Judicial ethics body have only very limited tools to enforce ethics codes. These institutions can issue private and public reprimands. In extreme cases, they can refer a judge for impeachment. At that point, it is up to Congress to act. But the ultimate death sentence is to prevent a judge from being a judge.

Take the Federal Circuit. The well-respected judges of that court have removed Judge Pauline Newman from hearing any cases until she submits to a health exam with the doctor of their choice. Newman filed a valiant legal challenge, but has lost in the District Court, and her hope now lies in the D.C. Circuit. Moreover, the Federal Circuit recently excommunicated her for another year. Newman is 97 years young. Chief Judge Kimberly Moore and her colleagues are probably waiting for Judge Newman to die. This is a stealth impeachment, and the other federal judges have done nothing about it. They are too busy trying to punish litigants in Texas for filing cases where the venue statutes permit them to file. (There is action afoot in the rules committee–stay tuned.) Anyway, I digress.

These are the things that lower court judges can do to enforce ethics codes. Does Justice Kagan really want to empower the likes of Judge Moore and others to suspend Supreme Court Justices from hearing cases? Or allow some inferior panel to force a Justice to recuse from a particular case? Will there now be entire rounds of litigation before these panels immediately after a cert grant?

The Wall Street Journal editorial board raises some other questions:

Could her panel issue subpoenas to investigate allegations? How would it sanction Justices who enjoy life tenure? Wouldn't setting up such a system encourage frivolous complaints, filed for partisan PR purposes or to make the process into the punishment?

Once this process exists, there will be thousands upon thousands of frivolous complaints. Look at the thousand "orchestrated" complaints filed against Judge Aileen Cannon–so many that Chief Judge Pryor ordered the clerk's office to stop accepting them! And this is only one district court judge. Imagine what will happen for Justices Thomas and Alito. There will be at least one judge somewhere who finds one of these complaints meritorious. Who will be the first Justice to get the Pauline Newman treatment? Did Kagan really think this suggestion through a policy matter?

I haven't even addressed the separation of powers problems: inferior judges sitting in judgment of apex officials. No way this flies.

At the end of the day, all of these calls for "judicial reform" are addressing a problem that barely exists, and mandate solutions that would cause substantial harm to the judiciary. Judge Jim Ho frames the issue well in his new National Review essay:

The double standards aren't an accident. They're intentional. They're a strategy to create a perverse incentive structure for judges: If you rule the way the critics dictate, you won't be criticized. You'll be fêted. But if you don't, you'll be ostracized.

That's why the double standards don't seem to trouble the critics. Because, to the critics, this isn't a debate — it's a war. The critics don't want neutrality. They want conformity. If you don't conform, they'll call you corrupt, unethical, racist, sexist, homophobic. They'll say you're just trolling, or auditioning. Whatever it takes for you to bend the knee. And even if you still won't conform, they'll attack you anyway, because others will get the message and comply.

Critics have repeatedly said that they want to pack the Court. But there's no need for them to pack the Court if they can just pressure the Court to do what they want.

I don't think Justice Kagan sees things in quite this light, but her proposals gives ammunition to those who do.

I regret that Justice Kagan started down this road. Given that President Biden will soon announce his own Court reform, this issue is on the wall. Once the filibuster is abolished–as Senator Elizabeth Warren has promised–I suspect the Court will be placed under this regime. My other predictions from four years ago may yet come to fruition.

The post What Would It Mean For Lower Federal Court Judges To Enforce A Code Of Conduct Against Supreme Court Justices? appeared first on Reason.com.

https://reason.com/volokh/2024/07/28/what-would-it-mean-for-lower-federal-court-judges-to-enforce-a-code-of-conduct-against-supreme-court-justices/

DougMacG

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Re: Lower Court Judges to Enforce Conduct Code Against SCOTUS?
« Reply #1947 on: July 29, 2024, 06:32:21 AM »
Are we going to change the constitutional order of the republic by amendment passed by 2/3rds of both chambers of Congress and ratified by 3/4th of the states, or by edict?
« Last Edit: July 29, 2024, 06:33:57 AM by DougMacG »

Body-by-Guinness

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Insanity Is An Asset?
« Reply #1948 on: July 29, 2024, 05:28:47 PM »
Edict, Doug, if we let them. Of course we have this going for us:

John Podhoretz
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3h
The nice thing about the Supreme Court proposal is that it's a) psychotic, b) transparent, c) unworkable, d) unconstitutional,  and e) proposed by someone who's non compos mentis. The bad thing is that liberals who can't stand that they don't control the Court  have gone insane

Crafty_Dog

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Biden Assault on SCOTUS
« Reply #1949 on: July 30, 2024, 03:25:13 PM »


Biden’s Political Assault on the Supreme Court
His destructive plan would make the Justices servants of the politics of the day.
By The Editorial Board
July 29, 2024 6:01 pm ET


President Biden on Monday announced his plan to “reform” the Supreme Court, and it’s important to understand how radical this political moment is. The President is putting the full weight of the Democratic Party behind an assault on judicial independence and the constitutional order. You might call it an attack on democracy.


“I have overseen more Supreme Court nominations as senator, vice president and president than anyone living today. I have great respect for our institutions and the separation of powers,” Mr. Biden said in an essay in the Washington Post justifying his assault. “What is happening now is not normal, and it undermines the public’s confidence in the court’s decisions, including those impacting personal freedoms. We now stand in a breach.”

***
Never mind the spectacle of a man in public life for 50 years demanding term limits. The “breach” is his. As a Senator in 1987, he helped to defeat the superbly qualified Robert Bork for the Court because Bork endorsed judicial originalism. But the originalists have prevailed in the long run and now have great influence on the Court. This is what infuriates him and his fellow Democrats. So they are now willing to destroy the Court to supposedly save it.

“Destroy” is not too strong a word. Mr. Biden is proposing to subject the Court to an ethics regime “enforceable” by someone other than the Court itself. His conceit is that this merely means the Justices would have to abide by the Code of Conduct of the Judicial Conference of the United States.

But the Justices already have a code of conduct they enforce that is nearly the same as that judicial code. The difference is the demand for outside enforcement. Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee want lower-court judges to investigate charges of ethics violations and then rule on the Justices’ behavior.

This is an invitation for partisans to besiege the Court with complaints, however trivial. If you want to know how that would go, consider that last month the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals stopped accepting duplicative complaints about Judge Aileen Cannon, who is sitting on the Donald Trump documents case. The circuit court received more than 1,000 complaints in a week as part of what it called an “orchestrated campaign.”

Mr. Biden says his reform will “restore trust and accountability to the court and our democracy,” but it would do the opposite. The deluge of ethics complaints, amplified by the press and partisans, would leave the public with the impression of routine corruption. This would further undermine respect for the Court’s decisions.

That’s even more true of Mr. Biden’s proposal to make it easier to disqualify Justices from hearing certain cases. The decision—often the duty—to sit on a case is at the heart of the judicial enterprise.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s ethics bill, which has passed the Senate Judiciary Committee, would let litigants at the Court file motions for recusal by Justices, whose colleagues could boot them off cases. This would make the Court an adjunct of whatever political atmosphere exists at a given time. The Justices targeted most would be those who issue unpopular opinions, however correct they are on the law or Constitution.

The President’s claim that the Court is currently “mired in a crisis of ethics” is simply false. Justice Thomas failed to disclose that he flew on a friend’s private aircraft before the Judicial Conference changed its rules to require that judges disclose such flights. He violated no judicial rules. No one has come up with any evidence that the Court’s rulings, or any Justice, has been influenced by gifts or other outside influence.

If Mr. Biden and Democrats were really concerned about ethics in government, they’d impose a total ban on Congress of all gifts, trips to conferences at fancy resorts, speaking fees, or anything else that provides even the appearance of a conflict of interest. But they won’t because the Members enjoy those perks and their anger at the Court has nothing to do with ethics. They are using ethics as a political ruse to gain more influence over the Court and its decisions.

Mr. Biden also endorsed an 18-year term limit for Justices, though the Constitution gives them life tenure. The idea is that Congress can create a “Senior Justice” position akin to the “senior status” that judges take on the circuit courts. But those lower-court judges take that status voluntarily, and Mr. Biden wants to forcibly retire Justices to duties akin to watching paint dry.

Adam White, who served on Mr. Biden’s judicial commission in 2021, makes the useful point that term limits would tie Supreme Court vacancies and appointments even more to presidential elections. He says this would further erode the appearance of judicial independence and make “the Court a spoil not just of politics, but of presidential politics exclusively.”

***
Mr. Biden also proposed a constitutional amendment to overturn the Court’s recent decision on presidential immunity, but we’ll leave that for another day. Suffice to say that it’s impossible to overestimate how pernicious Mr. Biden’s reform plan is. It doesn’t matter that its chances of passing are nil at the moment.

The President is giving this proposal an official Democratic Party imprimatur, and Vice President Kamala Harris was quick to endorse the plan on Monday. Its most damaging parts are a threat to pass the next time Democrats control all of the government.

And what about Republicans? Do they realize the Court’s future is on the ballot this year? Mr. Trump has spoken up in his fashion, but will Senators start explaining what is truly at stake? Maybe J.D. Vance could stop talking about cat ladies and start talking about the threat the Biden scheme poses to the Court and our constitutional republic.