The Court's approach to standing now, more or less, means any State can challenge any Federal law on anything. In a very strong system of federalism where States can push back against Federal laws at will, that's a good thing. They say bad facts make bad law. I suspect those in favor of an increasingly powerful Federal government will come to rue this decision.
I'm fine with most of the due process arguments. I think that was always the big issue for the EO. I don't think you can rely on the Executive saying, "no, no, it doesn't include legal green card holder or others legally entitled to enter." Those words need to be in the EO. That's what someone like, say, Justice Scalia would say. And I concur.
I depart from the Court on their due process claims for folks not entitled to be in the country. I don't think the cited authority supports those assertions in the least.
The only part of the decision I really dislike is the specific comment that extrinsic evidence of intent can be used to prove up establishment clause issues. I have previously explained why.
I'm also nonplussed by this:
The Court purports to say that it owes the EO lots of deference but can still review it. They don't really give the EO any deference. At all. And more to the point, think about this logic -- we're not going to uphold an EO purporting to protect US Citizens until US Citizens have been killed. Set aside the politics for a second -- think about that standard. It's especially "nonplussing" because the Court has no need to get that far. They have already set forth sufficient grounds to justify the order (namely, they don't the government will succeed).
Overall, nothing has really changed. Once the case was filed in the W.D. of Washington there was only going to be one outcome. The DCt invalidates and the 9th Circuit upholds. I think this could, COULD, be a useful tool to check the Administration's haste. But I only think it ends up as such if the Supreme Court rebukes the EO. The 9th Circuit doing so will not.
Of course, any sane President could easily rewrite the EO to make it clear that it does not apply to folks that have previously been granted to right to come to the US. And that would be that. He would, IMO, win in the Supreme Court. Personally, I'd have an EO ready to go and drop it as soon as the DCt invalidates the original or during the pendency of the appeal -- buy yourself enough time to get the Supreme Court back up to 9 and go in with a more sensible EO.
However, that's absolutely not what will happen. He'll take it to the Supreme Court as quickly as possible. Because he's DJT.
I'm fine with most of the due process arguments. I think that was always the big issue for the EO. I don't think you can rely on the Executive saying, "no, no, it doesn't include legal green card holder or others legally entitled to enter." Those words need to be in the EO. That's what someone like, say, Justice Scalia would say. And I concur.
I depart from the Court on their due process claims for folks not entitled to be in the country. I don't think the cited authority supports those assertions in the least.
The only part of the decision I really dislike is the specific comment that extrinsic evidence of intent can be used to prove up establishment clause issues. I have previously explained why.
I'm also nonplussed by this:
The Government has pointed to no evidence that any alien from any of the countries named in the Order has perpetrated a terrorist attack in the United States.
Overall, nothing has really changed. Once the case was filed in the W.D. of Washington there was only going to be one outcome. The DCt invalidates and the 9th Circuit upholds. I think this could, COULD, be a useful tool to check the Administration's haste. But I only think it ends up as such if the Supreme Court rebukes the EO. The 9th Circuit doing so will not.
Of course, any sane President could easily rewrite the EO to make it clear that it does not apply to folks that have previously been granted to right to come to the US. And that would be that. He would, IMO, win in the Supreme Court. Personally, I'd have an EO ready to go and drop it as soon as the DCt invalidates the original or during the pendency of the appeal -- buy yourself enough time to get the Supreme Court back up to 9 and go in with a more sensible EO.
However, that's absolutely not what will happen. He'll take it to the Supreme Court as quickly as possible. Because he's DJT.
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