Weekly Roundup, January 29, 2016

Did you miss your Supreme Court news this week? Let our Weekly Roundup help. (To stay on top of the latest Supreme Court happenings, follow ISCOTUS on Twitter.)

Here on ISCOTUS, Christopher Schmidt surveyed the legal challenge to President Obama`s immigration reform, which the Court will hear this spring.

Justice Alito is “fine with the idea of judges being perfectly boring in public” writes Mark Walsh in an ABAJournal story on the Justice’s first decade on the High Court. Yet, Walsh notes, even this happily boring judge knows how to work an audience with “his understated sense of humor and his modesty.”

On Monday, the Court announced orders from its January 22 Conference.  The Court, noted The Economist, shied away from reviewing cases dealing with abortion or the death penalty: “It seems that the nine may have, for one reason or another, drawn themselves a line they’re not willing to cross. The orders of January 25 may be a sign they feel a tad skittish about extending their hand still further into America’s most contentious disputes.”  Further coverage on Monday’s orders can be found at SCOTUSblog.

An article on Crimmigration postulates that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Mathis v. United States will significantly impact anyone “facing removal from the United States based on a criminal conviction.”

And with the presidential race in full flight, Supreme Court appointments remain a popular discussion topic. The Patriot Post considers the Court’s current lineup and the potential impact of the next justice.  And by the way, Obama has made clear that that next justice will not be him.

 

Obama’s Immigration Program and the Supreme Court

The Supreme Court agreed last week to review a legal challenge to President Obama’s plans to use his executive power to revamp immigration policy, and since then commentators have been weighing in with explanations and prognostications.  Here is a survey of where the issue now stands.

The case of United States v. Texas involves a challenge to a program President Obama announced in late 2014. Citing Congress’s inability to reform a broken immigration system, Obama declared that he would suspend deportation actions against millions of undocumented immigrants and allow them to legally work in the country.  The program would apply to approximately five million illegal immigrants who are the parents of citizens or of lawful permanent residents.

The program has never gone into effect. Twenty-six states immediately challenged it in court, and the plan was put on hold pending the outcome of the litigation.  The state challengers won the first two rounds of the legal battle, first in a federal district court in Texas, and then in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, which decided against the Administration in a 2-1 ruling.

The states challenging the presidential action raise several claims.  They argue that the President’s program violates the procedural requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act, which requires a notice and response period prior to the promulgation of new executive rules.  (This was the primary ground on which the district court ruled against the Administration.)  The states also argue that the President’s program violates the requirements of federal immigration law.  (This was the ground on which the federal appeals court ruled against the administration.)

In response, the Obama Administration’s lawyers counter not only that the President has statutory authority to implement the program, but that the challengers should not even be in court, because they lack the requisite “standing” to litigate the issue in federal court.  The states suffer no injury because of the policy, Administration lawyers argue, and therefore they cannot turn to the courts for relief.  (The states argue that since the program would require additional state expenditures, such as the issuance of driver’s licenses for undocumented immigrants, the program does in fact “injure” them.)

The Supreme Court will consider all these questions.  But the Justices threw the litigants a curveball when they accepted the case for review: they asked the litigants to address a question they and the lower-court judges who had ruling on the case had largely avoided thus far.  This was not some narrow, technical question, which the Justices on occasion insist on discussing.  To the contrary, this was a sweeping constitutional question—one that many constitutional lawyers assumed was “non-justiciable,” meaning it’s the kind of constitutional question the courts simply don’t decide. (For a brief discussion on this issue, see here.)  The question was whether in declining to deport immigrants whose presence in the United States violates federal law Obama violates his obligation, under Article II of the Constitution, to “take care” that the laws of the United States are “faithfully executed.”  

The stakes of the case are monumental.  Not only could the decision affect millions of undocumented immigrants, but it “could redefine the balance of power between Congress and the president,” according to Cornell Law Professor Stephen Yale-Loeher.

So now we’re all scrambling to get up to speed on the Take Care Clause.  A good start on this issue can be found on the Heritage Foundation website, which offers a useful summary of the Take Care clause written by UVA law professor Sai Prakash; it includes a survey of its limited litigation history. Garrett Epps weighed in on the Court’s added constitutional question in The Atlantic.  The Washington Post ran a story with a survey of the history behind the clause and scholarly interpretations of its meaning.  Also helpful is a recent post on Jurist by Professor Glenn Smith.

A sampling of expressions of support for the Administration’s position:

  • The New York Times editorial board writes in a January 19 editorial: “The states should never have been allowed standing to sue in the first place, and their substantive claims are groundless…. Mr. Obama is wholly within his authority to make wise use of limited enforcement resources. The Supreme Court has already recognized this fact; now it needs to reiterate it.”
  • The Los Angeles Times argues that “the court should act quickly to blow away the smoke and affirm the president’s authority.”
  • In the Washington Post, Ilya Somin explains why the President’s actions are “systematic, transparent exercises of presidential authority.”

And critics of the Administration’s position:

  • Carrie Severino of the Judicial Crisis Network tells CNN that “the fact that the Court added the constitutional question means that some justices recognized that this is not a run of the mill act of prosecutorial discretion, but a novel and controversial power grab.”
  • “For the past seven years, Obama has treated the take care clause as a mild suggestion,” writes conservative commentator George Will.
  • At the National Review, Josh Blackman hopes that “the Supreme Court is now poised to break new constitutional ground in order to preserve our embattled separation of powers.”

Weekly Roundup, January 22, 2016

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The biggest news of the week: the Court announced on Tuesday that it would review a challenge to Obama’s deferred-action policy for undocumented immigrants. The Court’s move—which was widely expected—generated commentary from NPR, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, The Atlantic, and The New Republic, among many others.

The week of oral arguments in the Supreme Court began with a strange one.  In Heffernan v. City of Paterson the Court considered whether a police officer who had made no effort to exercise his First Amendment right to free expression would nonetheless receive its protections when he was demoted because his bosses wrongly thought he spoke out against them. The argument received coverage from The Washington Post, NPR, and Education Week. There was also further commentary from The Economist and National Review.

Buzzfeed reported on Justice Breyer’s recent call to reconsider the constitutionality of the death penalty. According to Breyer, inmate Christopher Brooks’ request to halt his execution “underscores the need to reconsider the validity of capital punishment under the Eighth Amendment.”

On Wednesday, in Kansas v. Carr and Kansas v. Gleason, the Supreme Court ruled against three inmates who “committed acts of ‘almost inconceivable cruelty and depravity’.” Coverage from the New York Times, BloombergView, and NPR.

The Atlantic reported on an algorithm designed to determine the authorship of the Court’s unsigned opinions. Some of the justices’ tells: the Chief Justice likes to start sentences with “here” and end them with “the first place”; one of Justice Breyer favored phrases is “in respect to”; and Justice Scalia tends to start sentences with “of course” and writes “utterly” a lot.

The Week Ahead at the Supreme Court

The Supreme Court has four oral arguments scheduled this week. On Tuesday, the Court hears Heffernan v. City of Paterson, a First Amendment case regarding a police officer who was demoted based on his perceived political affiliation. Officer Heffernan was demoted because his superiors believed he was supporting the incumbent police chief’s opponent in an upcoming election. But they were wrong. Can Officer Heffernan claim his First Amendment rights were violated when he had not sought to exercise his free speech rights, but his superiors thought he had? This decision could have an effect on public employees’ job security, NorthJersey.com reports. Howard M. Wasserman offers a preview of the case at SCOTUSblog.

The other argument the Court hears on Tuesday is Americold Realty Trust v. ConAgra Foods, Inc. This case involves the issue of whether there is “diversity” between litigants, when one litigant is a trust, so that a case can be moved from state to federal court. It raises some very lawyerly questions. How should a court determine which state a trust is a citizen of? Should a court look only to the citizenship of the trustees, or can it also consider the citizenship of the trust’s beneficiaries for purposes of diversity jurisdiction? This problem “regularly pops up in litigation,” Law 360 reports, and the lower courts have been divided on it.

On Wednesday, the Court will hear oral arguments in two cases involving land disputes and federal authority. In Sturgeon v. Masica the Court will consider whether the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act limits National Park Service control over certain disputed lands. This case turns on whether non-federal Alaska land is subject to federal regulations. Congress intended for some regulations to have “general applicability,” like the Clean Air Act or the Clean Water Act, explains Law 360. Here, the Court will decide if federal land regulations have a similar general applicability.

Also on Wednesday is Nebraska v. Parker. In Nebraska, the Court will determine whether tribes retain control over land they sold over a hundred years ago. Does the long-ago sale of tribal lands to non-Indian settlers diminish the original boundaries of the Omaha Indian Reservation? If not, then tribes can exercise their taxing authority within the boundaries of the sold land. Lyle Denniston previews the case at SCOTUSblog. Forbes.com asks whether this case may be the “tipping point for the next phase of Indian policy for the human rights era.”

In other Supreme Court news we’ll be following this week, the Court remains a popular topic in the presidential primary contests. The next President is likely to have the opportunity to appoint at least one justice. Check out Constitution Daily for a report on what the candidates have said on the Supreme Court.

Also, people are talking about a potential future Supreme Court opinion striking down the death penalty.  This possibility gained newfound attention in the wake of Justice Breyer’s dissent in Glossip v. Gross last June. The New York Times recently published an editorial under the headline “The Death Penalty Endgame,” noting a petition currently before the Supreme Court in a Pennsylvania case that directly challenges the constitutionality of the death penalty.

Weekly Roundup, January 15, 2016

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The big decision of the week came on Tuesday, when the Court struck down Florida’s death penalty procedure because it gives too much power to judges, rather than juries. Reports from USA Today and NPR. Quoted in the Orlando Sentinel, Orange-Osceola State Attorney Jeff Ashton believed the decision wouldn’t greatly impact local capital cases.

Monday’s oral arguments in Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association garnered commentary from Huffington Post, Forbes, The Washington Post, and The Economist.

On Wednesday, the Court heard oral arguments in Puerto Rico v. Sanchez Valle, regarding whether Puerto Rico and the U.S. government are separate sovereigns for purposes of the 5th Amendment’s Double Jeopardy Clause. Coverage from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Huffington Post, and Slate.

Three upcoming cases concern Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) tests: Bernard v. Minnesota, Birchfield v. North Dakota, and Beylund v. Levi. Lisa Soronen wrote for the NCSL Blog, “The Supreme Court will decide whether state statutes criminalizing a person’s refusal to take a chemical BAC test where police have not obtained a warrant are unconstitutional.”

The Atlantic examines the impact the next President’s Supreme Court appointments could have on campaign finance reform.

Weekly Roundup, January 8, 2016

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In an op-ed in the Boston Globe, Hillary Clinton described the upcoming presidential election as a  “make-or-break moment—for the court and our country” since the next President will likely have the opportunity to appoint several Supreme Court justices. “There’s nothing surprising,” in Clinton’s op-ed, tweeted Ian Millhiser, “but it’s a big deal that she wrote it.”

Anticipating next week’s oral arguments for Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, commentary abounds. Coverage comes from Education Week, The Economist, The Wall Street Journal, and the Chicago Tribune, among others.

On Tuesday, over 100 women lawyers filed a brief supporting challenges to the Texas law that would result in the closing of many of the state’s abortion clinics. Richard Wolf reported for USA Today.

Chief Justice Roberts released a year end report focusing on recent changes to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Coverage and commentary on the reports come from The Wall Street Journal and the Civil Procedure and Federal Courts Blog.

Linda Hirshman, author a recent book on Justices O’Connor and Ginsburg, wrote an opinion piece in The Washington Post discussing the possibility of a nomination deadlock leaving the Supreme Court with eight justices.  Noting the rule that any tie vote on the Supreme Court means that the lower court’s holding controls, Hirschman concludes: “Thanks to a wealth of recent Democratic appointments on the lower courts, letting the Supreme Court go down to eight justices would favor liberals.”