Category Archives: Supreme Court
What Difference Would It Make If the Supreme Court in the Moore v. Harper Case Embraced the Bush v. Gore Concurrence Rather Than a Full-Throated Independent State Legislature Theory?
In my earlier recap of today’s oral argument in Moore v. Harper (transcript here), I suggested that the middle ground position that the three Justices in the middle might embrace would be bad but not awful compared to the… Continue reading
(Rick Hasen) Live-Blogging the Supreme Court’s Oral Arguments in the Moore v. Harper (Independent State Legislature); Now UPDATED with Analysis and Reason to Think Court Will Reject Maximalist Version of ISLT
[This post has been updated.]
UPDATE:
After almost three hours of oral argument, a divided Supreme Court appeared searching for a middle ground to hold that in really egregious cases state courts can violate the federal constitution when they apply… Continue reading
Argument previews for Moore v. Harper
Jess Bravin in the Wall Street Journal.
Adam Liptak in the New York Times.
Nina Totenberg at NPR.
Robert Barnes in the Washington Post. (Which includes this graf: “‘Fringe’ is a word ubiquitous in the filings.… Continue reading
Some Moore v. Harper commentary and roundup
Ahead of oral argument in Moore v. Harper December 7, commentary and roundup is coming in from everywhere. A few pieces:
In the New York Times, Michael Wines has a piece, “Supreme Court to Hear Arguments on Far-Reaching Elections… Continue reading
“Republicans’ Supreme Court argument on redistricting could backfire”
Sam Wang oped for WaPo:
But if the Republicans win in the U.S. Supreme Court, the result on a national scale would almost certainly benefit Democrats. Why? Because outside North Carolina, only swing states and blue states have curbed… Continue reading
“The Supreme Court Case That’s All About Donald Trump: Even if it’s not explicitly about him at all.”
Quinta Jurecic on thie Moore v. Harper case in The Atlantic:
Over the past several months, both the litigants and outside parties—known as amici curiae, or “friends of the court”—have filed a mountain of briefs hashing out these issues. These… Continue reading
Ethan Herenstein: “Can State Legislatures Exercise Federal Legislative Power? A Flaw in the Defense of the Independent State Legislature Theory”
The following is a guest post from Ethan Herenstein of the Brennan Center:
In their reply brief defending the independent state legislature theory (ISLT), the petitioners in Moore v. Harper doubled down on the assertion that when state legislatures… Continue reading
“How the Supreme Court Plans to Undermine Future Elections”
Simon Lazarus for TNR.
If Petitioners Get Their Way in Moore v. Harper Case, the Dispute over Saturday Voting in Georgia Senate Runoff Would Spill into Federal Court as Well as State Court
I noted on the blog the other day that the state of Georgia, after losing in the state court of appeals, declined to appeal further the ruling that Georgia law allows counties to set Saturday as a day of early… Continue reading
“Supreme Court dismisses challenge to Texas state legislative maps”
CNN:
The Supreme Court on Monday dismissed a challenge to Texas state legislative maps that critics say intentionally dilute minority voting power and result in an illegal racial gerrymander.
At the center of the dispute is Senate District 10, which… Continue reading
Petitioners’ Bizarre Answer in Moore v. Harper Reply Brief About How States Can Rein in Partisan Gerrymandering
Petitioners in Moore v. Harper argue that state supreme courts cannot apply state constitutional provisions limiting partisan gerrymandering to stop state legislatures from gerrymandering congressional districts. Doing so, they argue, would usurp the power of the legislature which “alone” has… Continue reading
Adam Liptak: “Supreme Court Case on State Legislatures Could Open Litigation Floodgates”
Adam Liptak NYT Sidebar column:
As the Supreme Court prepares to hear a case next month that could radically reshape how federal elections are conducted, it has received scores of friend-of-the-court briefs featuring enough strange bedfellows to fill a hotel.In… Continue reading
“Originalism Demands Only One Answer in the Supreme Court’s Big Elections Case”
David Gans on Moore v. Harper.