After a redistricting treatise this morning, just a snippet of follow-up for now.
This morning, I suggested that the question on the substance of a First Amendment claim for the partisan gerrymandering cases — the question in line with… Continue reading
Nina Totenberg for NPR’s Morning Edition:
The First Amendment argument, however, appeals, in particular, to the justice whose vote is likely to decide the case, Justice Anthony Kennedy. In 2004, he provided the fifth vote for the court staying out… Continue reading
In light of today’s Benisek argument, and at the risk of getting banished to another forum (I jest, I think), I offer a modest addition to the Pildes–Stephanopoulos discussion on partisan gerrymandering and the First Amendment.
I agree… Continue reading
I have written this piece for Politico Magazine. It begins:
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court hears arguments in Benisek v. Lamone, a case about whether Maryland violated the First Amendment rights of Republican voters by redrawing the state’s congressional districts… Continue reading
WaPo:
Costello had been considering the decision since February, when the Pennsylvania Supreme Court drew a new map to replace a gerrymander that Republicans put into place seven years ago. The 6th District, which had cut through three suburban counties… Continue reading
Michael Li and Laura Royden NYT oped:
We conducted an analysis to measure how hard it would be for Democrats in each state to win additional seats under these gerrymandered maps. The results are sobering. In 2006, a roughly five-and-a-half-point… Continue reading
Ned Foley replies to Earl Maltz response on originalism and gerrymandering:
Sometimes originalist inquiry leads to unexpected conclusions. Texas v. Johnson, the flag burning case, serves as a good illustration of this. Upon initial examination, it is easy to be… Continue reading
The following is a guest post from Professor Earl Maltz of Rutgers Law:
In a recent series of blog posts drawn from a forthcoming article in the Georgia Law Review, Professor Edward B. Foley argues that a successful constitutional… Continue reading
Lawrence Hurley for Reuters:
Eyler, a retired business owner in the small town of Thurmont roughly 55 miles north of the U.S. capital, said he thinks he and others like him were being targeted by the Democrats because of their… Continue reading
I have written this blog post over at the Harvard Law Review blog. It begins:
After waiting, and waiting, and waiting, the United States Supreme Court finally answered the question whether it would heed Pennsylvania Republicans’ calls… Continue reading
The following is the fourth in a series of guest posts on Benisek v. Lamone by Ohio State’s Ned Foley.
Edward B. Foley
This blog essay is the fourth in a series derived from a contribution to a University… Continue reading