How Appealing



Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Judge Gorsuch, merely a dissent away from the appellate judging trifecta: As readers are well aware, the author of this blog has long viewed opinions written by Tenth Circuit Judge Neil M. Gorsuch as must-read. In addition, the author of this blog is amused ever so slightly when the same judge who wrote the opinion of the court for an appellate panel also adds a concurring opinion. In such instances, the authoring judge is merely a dissenting opinion away from the seemingly ever elusive appellate judging trifecta. (For those keeping score at home, this blog’s archives reveal that the trifecta has been achieved at least once during in the more than 14-year history of “How Appealing.”)

Yesterday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit issued a decision that checked both of those first two boxes. Even better, insofar as some readers are concerned, the opinions deal with the still controversial subject of Chevron deference.

Posted at 11:02 AM by Howard Bashman



“Kansas is latest state to press for voter restrictions”: John Bacon of USA Today has this report.

Reuters reports that “Kansas asks U.S. appeals court to reinstate strict voter ID rule.”

And The Associated Press reports that “Court considers Kansas rule that voters prove citizenship.”

You can access via this link (4.46 MB mp3 audio file) the audio of yesterday’s oral argument before a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.

Posted at 10:42 AM by Howard Bashman