“When Liberals Hated National Injunctions; Biden and Democrats griped when conservative judges blocked their plans; Their views have changed now that Trump is President”: Columnist Allysia Finley will have this op-ed in Monday’s edition of The Wall Street Journal.
“Anti-Trump groups seek new legal strategies after Supreme Court limits injunctions”: Stephen Dinan of The Washington Times has this report.
“At Supreme Court, steady wins for conservative states and Trump’s claims of executive power”: David G. Savage of The Los Angeles Times has this report.
“How Trump’s emergencies and wins dominated the Supreme Court term; The justices’ regular caseload was overshadowed by requests from the president to allow some of his most controversial policies to go forward”: Ann E. Marimow of The Washington Post has this report.
“How the Supreme Court Dipped Its Toes in Trump 2.0; The president has only begun to add to the court’s workload; its summer break might be short-lived”: Brent Kendall of The Wall Street Journal has this report.
“Judicial Notice (06.29.25): Unleashed; The end of the SCOTUS Term, Justice Barrett v. Justice Jackson, Emil Bove’s latest controversy, a promising Biglaw merger, and two new litigation boutiques.” David Lat has this post at his “Original Jurisdiction” Substack site.
“‘No Right Is Safe’: The Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v CASA sent American democracy over a cliff.” You can access the new episode of Slate’s “Amicus” podcast via this link.
“Beyond Triumphalism and Despair: On Reacting to the Supreme Court of the United States.” Cass Sunstein has this post at his Substack site.
At his “Better Judgment” Substack site, Reynolds Holding has a post titled “Tin-Eared Justice; How the Supreme Court sounds to people matters.”
And at his “How Things Work” Substack site, Hamilton Nolan has a post titled “Cross the Courts Off the List; We have enough information to conclude that the law won’t save us.”
“The Clear Winner in Trump v. CASA: The Supreme Court; Lower courts lost, and the executive branch got mixed results.” Jack Goldsmith has this post at the “Executive Functions” Substack site.
And at the “Just Security” blog, Samuel Issacharoff and Derek T. Muller have a post titled “Relocating Nationwide Injunctions.”
“Inside the fallout at Paul, Weiss after the firm’s deal with Trump; Firm chair Brad Karp said he struck a deal with the White House to save his business; But in the weeks since, the firm has lost some high-profile talent”: Daniel Barnes of Politico has this report.
“A Reckless Judicial Nomination Puts the Senate to the Test”: Columnist David French has this essay online at The New York Times.