#SCOTUS, April 23, 2018. Travel ban week. Arguments aren’t until Wednesday, with big arguments on the administrative state and gerrymandering before then, but the focus this week, publicly, is clear.pic.twitter.com/prQedwWVbm
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Here is Breyer's Free Enterprise dissent in question: https://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/08-861.ZD.html …
When Wall asserted that you can argue that SEC ALJs issue binding decisions and said "it's manipulable," Justice Sotomayor countered, "Everything is manipulable."
It truly was a very interesting argument, with important questions about the way effective governance is best ensured, through independence (removal from politics) or political accountability, and then what limits the Constitution places on those decisions.
BTW, here was the full #SCOTUS orders list from this morning: https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/042318zor_6j37.pdf …
This afternoon we have Deputy AG Rod Rosenstein arguing in a rare afternoon #SCOTUS argument (which generally only happens when they have three arguments in a day) — this one about federal sentencing law.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein leaving the Supreme Court following arguments in a sentencing law case this afternoon.pic.twitter.com/yIRm9dVX3n
Here's my report from #SCOTUS today. Or, how a low-profile case about criminal sentences gave Deputy AG Rod Rosenstein a chance to spend an hour at the Supreme Court — and away from the news cycle.https://www.buzzfeed.com/chrisgeidner/rod-rosenstein-has-his-day-in-court?utm_term=.tmNrLNKMd#.wsy3XnqWp …
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