Breaking: #SCOTUS blocks a lower court ruling that required Alabama to draw a new congressional map to prevent the dilution of Black people's votes under the Voting Rights Act. The vote was 5-4, with Roberts joining the more liberal justices in dissent. supremecourt.gov/opinions/21pdf…
Note that, as has been the case with Roberts before in these splits this past year, he does not necessarily join Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan on the substantive question. Here, he specifically questions the underlying voting rights precedent, but says that is the law now.
Diving into the opinion, let's start with "the opinion." First, it's not an opinion. This is simply an order on a set of applications. This is the "shadow docket" (that Sam Alito doesn't like being called that b/c he says it's mean), and b/c of that, this is all ~the court~ said.
There is no rationale given by three of the five justices in the majority as to why they chose to take this action today that will change elections in Alabama this year and their representation in Congress after that. (That's Thomas, Gorsuch, and Barrett.)
Kavanaugh, joined by Alito, does write today, although it's basically to say that the dissent is wrong to say that the effects of the ruling are ... the effects of the ruling. This, like the Texas SB8 actions from SCOTUS and the 5th Circuit, use procedure to hide substance.
I find it particularly weird to see Kavanaugh/Alito invoke the Purcell principle this way when we're talking about congressional maps in the year of redistricting. When it's new maps being adopted, soon before elections, how can it apply in this way? (@rickhasen?)
While Kavanaugh strains to insist that their decision today is not a vote on the merits that the trial court's voting rights ruling is wrong, Roberts makes clear that his is not a vote on the merits that the underlying Supreme Court precedent itself is right.
Kagan, joined by Breyer and Sotomayor, in dissent: "Staying [the district court] decision forces Black Alabamians to suffer what under that law is clear vote dilution. With respect, I again dissent from a ruling that 'undermines Section 2 [of the VRA] and the right it provides.'"
Kagan drops a footnote (that she let carry over to a second page) to Kavanaugh.
Kagan discusses the substance of the vote dilution claims below since today's ruling means the trial on those issues will be ignored for the upcoming elections.
Part II of Kagan's dissent goes to the heart of the long-term consequences here: Did the majority today change the Voting Rights Act with no opinion? And how? (We don't know, of course, because the majority didn't write, and Kavanaugh/Alito insist it's not a merits decision.)
OK, yeah. Part III is Kagan talking about how absurd Kavanaugh's use of the Purcell principle here is. (She frames it as to Alabama's argument, presumably because his opinion isn't for the court, so she's ignoring it.)
And, finally, the dissenters' conclusion, which, in sum, is that the five-justice reactionary majority — pushing Roberts aside — is using the Supreme Court to undermine the Supreme Court, the district court, the Voting Rights Act, and Black Alabamians' electoral rights.
Today is the sort of day that I was writing about when I wrote my first piece for MSNBC last April: "Now Roberts may be losing control of his creation." msnbc.com/opinion/why-su…
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Schumer is filing cloture on several judicial nominations. Republicans are forcing them to go into executive session separately for each nomination. The Dems are just pushing ahead. Here was Schumer before the 10th vote, by my count, began.
By the Republicans refusing to give unanimous consent, the Dems are having to go through a series of procedural votes on each nominee.
They're passing on party-line votes, but the Republicans are literally just forcing them to take hours on this.
So far, cloture has been filed for:
- Amir H. Ali (D.D.C.)
- Sparkle L. Sooknanan (D.D.C.)
- Brian E. Murphy (D. Mass.)
- Anne Hwang (C.D. Calif.)
- Cynthia Dixon (C.D. Calif.)
This voting began at 6:32 pm, C-SPAN notes, after the vote on Kidd for the 11th Circuit.
BREAKING: The Fifth Circuit blocks an order from Judge Reed O'Connor that Media Matters turn over donor information to X Corp. in a lawsuit over the group's coverage of X, holding MM is likely to succeed in stopping disclosure.
The panel had a far-right majority, too, with both Judge Jerry Smith, a Reagan appointee, and Judge Kurt Engelhardt, a Trump appointee, on it — so, if O'Connor had a shot, it was here. Judge James Graves, an Obama appointee, was the third judge. Opinion: documentcloud.org/documents/2524…
Here's my big report at Law Dork from last month on O'Connor — troubling figure in today's federal judiciary, both on the substance of his rulings and the many direct and indirect conflicts that his extensive individual stock ownership has caused. lawdork.com/p/judge-overse…
I do think it's important to talk about this as it is. The GOP AGs are *asking* to amend their complaint in the existing lawsuit. It has some new claims, but most was already in their earlier complaint. And, DOJ has already said the entire case should be tossed.
They are doing this because they want to stay in front of Kacsmaryk — despite the fact that he is a Northern District of Texas judge and they are the Missouri, Kansas, and Idaho AGs. And despite the fact that SCOTUS already said the original plaintiffs lacked standing.
The AGs filed a motion for Kacsmaryk to accept their amended complaint on Friday, Oct. 11.
Before that, though, on Sept. 30, all the parties told Kacsmaryk what they thought should happen to the case now that it was back to him from SCOTUS. DOJ said it should be dismissed:
NEW: Alito continued, as of the end of 2023, to own shares of more than 25 companies' stocks.
Under our "financial disclosure" system, we learned of Alito's 12/31/23 stock holdings in a delayed report not filed until 8/13/24 and not posted until today. documentcloud.org/documents/2510…
As you might recall, Law Dork reported on two of Alito's stock trades earlier this year, when a "Periodic Transaction Report" revealed that he sold at least some of his stock in Anheuser-Busch and bought stock in Molson Coors on 8/14/23. lawdork.com/p/alito-bud-li…
In today's posted annual disclosure, we confirm that Alito sold *all* of his Anheuser-Busch stock that day when he replaced it with Molson Coors stock.
Background: Here's my Law Dork report on the July Supreme Court immunity ruling. lawdork.com/p/robertss-maj…
Jack Smith added "private" to all of the co-conspirators, to highlight their clearly non-official roles — and got rid of Jeffrey Clark, the DOJ guy who was willing to be acting AG and pursue Trump's fake election fraud claims if Trump let him.
NEWS: The ACLU has filed their brief at the Supreme Court on behalf of the plaintiffs challenging Tennessee's ban on gender-affirming medical care for minors.
Here's the ACLU brief, calling on the Supreme Court to vacate the Sixth Circuit's ruling from last year holding that the Tennessee ban is likely constitutional: supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/23/2…
DOJ's brief is also due today. I'll have more at Law Dork after it is in.
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