First decision is NIFLA v. Becerra. Thomas has the 5-4 decision split along ideological lines, finding that the California law's licensed notice "likely violates" the First Amendment and the unlicensed notice "unduly burdens speech." Breyer wrote the dissent. #SCOTUS
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Note: Whenever the court says, "we may assume without deciding that plaintiffs’ statutory claims are reviewable," it means the plaintiffs lost that argument.pic.twitter.com/7ZI2KUotHx
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On those statutory claims, the court rules, explicitly, that the law allows the president to ban all people from a given country.pic.twitter.com/kMrQR36sf1
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Here's my updated, first full-run-through story at
@BuzzFeedNews on today's big#SCOTUS decision upholding Trump's third travel ban.https://www.buzzfeed.com/chrisgeidner/the-supreme-court-upholds-trumps-travel-ban?utm_term=.obZ3PnVx8#.kb3NRePQ5 …Show this thread -
The scene outside of
#SCOTUS this afternoon, in the wake of today’s travel ban ruling.pic.twitter.com/UgvdXxDHg6Show this thread -
This is true. Additionally, there were things she said in the courtroom — sometimes just an adjective here or there, but also full sentences like the one I noted above — that do not appear in her written dissent.https://twitter.com/ninatotenberg/status/1011636931548020736?s=21 …
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More rubber stamp than opinion, don't you think?
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Bingo
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What happens if I have an opinion on Thursday?
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Sorry what does this mean?
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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