Monday, February 11, 2019

No surprise here

Now that Trump has the Supreme Court he wants, the Solicitor General is trying to bypass lower courts and take cases straight to the Supreme.
Solicitor General Noel Francisco has requested on eight separate occasions, twice in the same case, that justices bypass a regional federal appeals court and instead review a ruling by a lower district court.

Those requests, known as petitions for a writ of certiorari before judgment, stemmed from challenges to President Trump’s restrictions on transgender people serving in the military, its decision to wind down the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and its move to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census.

Court watchers say that in addition to being unusual, the strategy to leapfrog normal judicial order is aggressive and may undermine the solicitor general’s credibility with the justices.

  The Hill
With the honest justices anyway, but maybe not with the GOP appointees.
Legal scholars also fear that Francisco may be forcing the court to wade into political disputes before they are ready, a move that could make the public view the court as just another political institution.
We're 98% there already.
The solicitor general is employed by the Justice Department and often referred to to as the "10th justice," because they have the dual responsibility of serving the executive branch as a key advocate and helping the court as a kind of counselor develop the law that reflects the country’s long-term interests.

[...]

The justices grant and hear oral arguments in only 80 or so cases out of the 7,000 to 8,000 petitions they receive during each nine-month term. They prefer to see the rulings from appeals courts before taking up a case, and competing views by regional circuit courts is typically a prerequisite for review at the Supreme Court.

Only four justices need to agree to take up a case for it to be heard by the Supreme Court, and Trump has shifted the balance of the court to the right with the successful nominations of Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh.

But Trump hasn’t had a winning record at the appellate level, with the California-based 9th Circuit being a particular annoyance for the president.

[...]

[A] federal district court judge in California blocked his administration’s effort to prevent people who cross the border illegally from seeking asylum.

That case was appealed to the 9th Circuit, which upheld the lower court’s ruling.
Which is a clue as to why he wants to bypass that court.
That appellate court was one that Francisco asked the Supreme Court to skip over to review the injunction against the transgender military restrictions and the lawfulness of rescinding DACA.

[...]

But is Francisco’s strategy paying off?

The justices last month refused to review whether district courts erred in blocking the administration from enforcing its restrictions on transgender military service. The appeals courts hadn’t weighed in yet, but the Supreme Court granted the administration’s emergency request to enforce its policy while the matter is being litigated.

[...]

“The court has found ways so far to split the difference,” said Stephen Vladeck, a professor at the University of Texas School of Law.

“I think it can be read both as not endorsing what the solicitor general is doing, but also not slapping him on the wrist,” he added.
...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.

No comments: