“162. What Does the Birthright Citizenship Ruling Portend? Friday’s ruling in Trump v. CASA will fundamentally alter the relationship between federal courts and other government institutions; How much depends upon three questions the decision left unanswered.” Steve Vladeck has this post at his “One First” Substack site.
Online at The New Yorker, Ruth Marcus has an essay titled “The Supreme Court Sides with Trump Against the Judiciary; Its ruling lets the President temporarily revoke birthright citizenship — and enforce other unconstitutional executive orders without fear of being blocked by ‘rogue judges.’”
Online at Slate, Robyn Nicole Sanders has a Jurisprudence essay titled “The Supreme Court’s Birthright Citizenship Ruling Gets History Achingly Wrong.”
Also online at Slate, Shirin Ali has a Jurisprudence essay titled “Sonia Sotomayor Puts It Clearly: None of Our Rights Are Safe.”
And also online at Slate, Matt Watkins has a Jurisprudence essay titled “The United States Is About to Embark on a Terrifying Experiment in Mass Statelessness.”
“Why Are We Here?” You can access today’s new episode of the “Divided Argument” podcast via this link.
“Closing the book on the term”: Mark Walsh has this View from the Court post at “SCOTUSblog.”
“In Birthright Citizenship Case, Supreme Court Limits Power of Judges to Block Trump Policies; The ruling clears a major hurdle to President Trump’s agenda and could reshape American citizenship, at least temporarily, as lower court challenges proceed”: Abbie VanSickle of The New York Times has this report.
Ann E. Marimow of The Washington Post reports that “Supreme Court limits nationwide orders that have blocked Trump’s birthright citizenship ban; The ruling keeps President Donald Trump’s citizenship ban on hold for at least 30 days and sends cases back to lower courts to determine next steps.”
David G. Savage and Andrea Castillo of The Los Angeles Times reports that “Supreme Court limits judges’ ability to block Trump’s birthright citizenship ban.”
Jess Bravin and Mariah Timms of The Wall Street Journal report that “Supreme Court Limits Rulings Against Trump on Birthright Citizenship; Decision imposes new restrictions on the power of individual judges to issue orders with nationwide effect.”
Maureen Groppe of USA Today reports that “In win for Trump, Supreme Court orders courts to reconsider limits on birthright citizenship and other policies.”
And Stephen Dinan and Alex Swoyer of The Washington Times report that “Justices back Trump on nationwide injunctions, clear way for limits on birthright citizenship.”
You can access today’s ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court at this link.
“Behind the Scenes at Harvard Law Review: There’s a lot to unpack with over 2,200 pages of internal memos from the decision-making process now released; Here are details on what they show.” Adam Feldman has this post at his “Legalytics” Substack site.