Strict Scrutiny - Are Trump Administration Officials in Criminal Contempt?
Episode Date: April 21, 2025Leah, Melissa and Kate join forces to dig through the Trump administration’s latest affronts to the law and the possibility that its officials could be held in criminal contempt. They also react in ...real time to the Court’s decision to take up the question of birthright citizenship and cheer Harvard’s stand against the administration. Finally, they take a look at what’s in front of SCOTUS this week, including a new opportunity for the conservative majority to use the EPA as a punching bag and its latest foray into the culture wars.Hosts’ favorite things:Melissa: White Potus (SNL); Good Dirt, Charmaine Wilkerson; Hacks (Max); Confessions of a Female Founder (with Reshma Saujani)Kate: So You Want to be a Dissident Julia Angwin & Ami Fields-Meyer (New Yorker); Who Is Government? The Untold Story of Public Service, Michael Lewis; Just Security (Substack); Judge Wilkinson’s opinion for the 4th circuit on the Abrego Garcia case; Catalina, Karla Cornejo VillavicencioLeah: Never Again Will I Visit Auschwitz: A Graphic Family Memoir of Trauma & Inheritance, Ari Richter; The Vibe Shifts Against The Right, Michelle Goldberg (NYT); Harvard’s new websiteAlso mentioned this episode: The Supreme Court threatens to bring “Don’t Say Gay” to every classroom in America, Ian Millhiser (Vox); Five Questions About Domestic Use of the Military, Steve Vladek (One First) Get tickets for STRICT SCRUTINY LIVE – The Bad Decisions Tour 2025! 5/31 – Washington DC6/12 – NYC10/4 – ChicagoLearn more: http://crooked.com/eventsPre-order your copy of Leah's forthcoming book, Lawless: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad Vibes (out May 13th)Follow us on Instagram, Threads, and Bluesky
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Mr. Chief Justice, please report.
It's an old joke, but when a man argues
against two beautiful ladies like this,
they're going to have the last word.
She spoke, not elegantly, but with unmistakable clarity.
She said, I ask no favor for my sex.
All I ask of our brethren is that they take their feet off our necks. off on X. Hello, and welcome back to Strict Scrutiny, your podcast about the Supreme Court and the
legal culture that surrounds it.
We're your hosts.
I'm Melissa Murray.
I'm Kate Shaw. And I'm Leah Littman. We're your hosts. I'm Melissa Murray. I'm Kate Shaw.
And I'm Leah Littman.
We have another jam-packed show for you today.
First, we're going to cover some of the ongoing shenanigans
in the White House.
That's H-A-U-S, as in the German version.
Then we'll turn to the ongoing shenanigans at 1 1st Street
and preview what the court has on deck this week.
But first up, a segment that we're now calling
fuck shit and other news.
We got some major updates in the cases concerning the president's use of the Alien Enemies Act.
But let's start by first setting the scene for all of this.
As many of you listeners will know, the president of the United States met with El Salvador's
leader last Monday.
And obviously, the two had a lot to talk about,
including what the F is going on with regard
to Kilmar Abrego-Garcia, the US resident who
was mistakenly rendered to an El Salvadoran mega prison
because of a quote unquote paperwork error.
Obviously, the two leaders spent some time
discussing how to rectify this egregious mishap.
Wrong.
They spent absolutely no time trying to rectify that egregious mishap. Wrong. They spend absolutely no time trying
to rectify that egregious mishap.
Instead, the leader of the free-ish world
was caught on an El Salvadoran livestream
crowing about how he needs to send the quote,
home groans to El Salvador next.
And he also noted that El Salvador should build up
its prison network to accommodate all of the quote,
unquote, home groans. Let's have a listen.
Home groans are next. The home groans. You gotta build about five more places.
Yeah, that's better.
Alright.
It's not big enough.
So that's chilling and so was Stephen Miller's take during that same Oval Office meeting
on the administration's supposedly unanimous win at SCOTUS.
So during that meeting, Miller, who of course is one of the president's key advisors on
immigration policy, offered his hot take on the Supreme Court's disposition of the Abrego
Garcia case.
So you will recall, listeners, as Melissa just said, Kilmar Abrego Garcia
was erroneously, the government admits erroneously, expelled to an El Salvadoran mega-prison.
A district court ordered the administration to take steps to return Abrego Garcia to the
United States. The government appealed, arguing that the district court's order constituted
an impermissible attempt by the judiciary to interfere with the president's power to conduct foreign policy.
As we discussed on last week's episode, the Supreme Court then weighed in to say that
while the district court cannot dictate American foreign policy, it does have the authority
to correct legal wrongs, including the erroneous rendition to El Salvador of an individual
an earlier immigration court specifically said could not be rendition to El Salvador of an individual an earlier immigration court
specifically said could not be deported to El Salvador because of the likelihood of the
danger he would face there.
So the Supreme Court in a unanimous decision ordered the administration to facilitate Abrego
Garcia's return.
There were no noted dissents.
Peewee German, however, had his own hot take of the court's disposition of the case.
I don't know, maybe he translated it to German and things came up a little fuzzy,
but you can take a listen to that here. There's a nine zero in our favor against the district
court ruling saying that no district court has the power to compel the foreign policy function of
the United States. As Pam said, the ruling solely stated that if this individual at
El Salvador's sole discretion was sent back to our country, that we could deport him a second time.
The guy literally alchemized defeat into victory. Incredible. You know, for weeks, folks have been
wondering whether the administration is going to openly defy the Supreme Court. I don't think we'd
anticipated that instead of open defiance, we'd get magical
thinking instead where they just declared the Supreme Court had said the opposite of
what they did and therefore they are in compliance with whatever they say the Supreme Court did.
So that's kind of the scene and now we want to go to the judges.
So Judge Boasberg told the administration that he is not the one.
Judge Boasberg went off on the administration. So pull up a chair,
recall that Judge Boesberg is the district court judge who presided over the original lawsuit,
alleging that the administration under the auspices of the Alien Enemies Act was rendering
Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador without any due process on the view that the migrants were
members of the Tren de Aragua gang. Judge Boesberg, not surprisingly, given this constitution thing we supposedly got,
was appalled that none of the migrants
were given a hearing or any other process
to challenge the administration's claims.
So he told the administration to return
the planes that had departed for El Salvador,
and the administration's response was basically,
make me bitch.
And then Judge Boesberg was like, excuse you?
The fuck you think you're talking to?
He would like to know why the administration thinks
it doesn't have to offer these migrants any kind of due
process and why it believes it can give him
or any other judge, for that matter, the middle finger.
Now ultimately, as we know, the Supreme Court
got their hands on this case and the court issued
a very narrow procedural ruling
that concluded that the case had been improperly filed
in the district of the District of Columbia,
and that instead it ought to have been filed in the district
where the migrants were detained before their departure
to El Salvador.
So that is in Texas.
And that the challenges then should
have proceeded as habeas partitions in the Texas district
court. And so the administration was then like, so I guess we're done here, right? should have proceeded as habeas partitions in the Texas District Court.
And so the administration was then like,
so I guess we're done here, right?
And Judge Boesberg, who's obviously
been catching up on the last season of hacks,
was like, no, bitch, let's begin.
So last Wednesday, Judge Boesberg
issued a 46-page ruling in which he
threatened to initiate criminal contempt proceedings
unless the administration answered his questions about why it refused to provide
due process to the migrants and why the administration ignored his order to turn the plane and the
migrants around. And the cherry on top was that he laid out an entire plan for how this
would proceed.
Stunt on these hoes, Queen.
I love that we are standing Brett Kavanaugh as a law school housemate.
These are bleak times, Melissa.
Bleak times.
Join our sorority.
I have no idea what kind of relationship he has with Brett Kavanaugh.
And I have no idea, I don't know really anything about Judge Boasberg.
I've never met him.
But I do think he is rising to the moment.
And he must know that they are going to fight him tooth and nail.
And he is writing for history and not holding back
about how egregious this conduct is.
And he is acting as though the Constitution and the law still
matter.
And I think that matters a lot.
Obviously has masculine energy.
The only one of these fools right now who seems to.
Well, Chachinistu. Stunned on these hoes, King.
He's actually a tall king, not a short king.
He's pretty tall.
That's true.
So, okay, here is basically what he laid out.
He wants sworn declarations from administration officials in order to determine who was responsible
for making the decisions about due process and ignoring his early orders in the case.
In terms of who was responsible, I think we have a hunch.
It was Peewee German in the study with whatever pen.
So if that didn't work, then he was going to refer the matter
to the Department of Justice,
which could then file criminal charges.
Spoiler alert, that's not gonna happen.
Pamela Jo Bondi is like, no, absolutely not.
Well, another option the administration has is,
as Judge Mosberg note, to basically cure any contempt
by returning the individuals from El Salvador,
acting as though they actually complied with his order
and turned the planes around.
But as Melissa noted, there is a possibility that Pamela Jo Bondi would elect not to prosecute any contempt.
Very faint possibility.
Very, very faint.
Just being very generous here, that she
would elect not to bring criminal charges for contempt
of federal court order, in which case, Judge Sposberg noted
there was a possibility that he could exercise his authority
under the relevant rules to appoint an outside prosecutor
to prosecute the case.
Now, this has been done before.
Judges have appointed lawyers to prosecute contempt cases.
This happened in the Donsinger case
that went up to the Supreme Court,
where there was a constitutional challenge
to the lawfulness of having private attorneys appointed
by a judge to prosecute these kinds of cases.
The Supreme Court elected not to take up that case,
although Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh indicated
they would have done so.
Should also note that even if that happened,
that is even if a private attorney launched
a successful prosecution of criminal contempt of a court
order, criminal contempt of federal court orders
is a pardonable offense.
And in fact, Donald Trump has pardoned
people who were convicted of contempt of federal court
orders.
During the first Trump administration,
that individual
who benefited from that, Joe Arpaio.
Can I just say, you know, there are definitely constitutional questions, at least on this
court's sort of view of executive power about the permissibility of outside prosecutors.
There's certainly this pardon question.
And to my mind, none of that is any reason for Boasberg not to proceed under the law
as it currently stands and appoint an outside prosecutor.
And if the Supreme Court wants to find that's impermissible, let it be.
Or if the president wants to pardon, let him do that.
But sort of don't do their work for them.
Totally agree.
Let's back up a second, though.
And Kate, I think you're sort of gesturing toward this in your comment.
But we have a federal judge who is issuing an order finding probable cause
that the government was in criminal contempt
of that judge's order, and that they willfully disregarded it.
And that is a big, huge deal.
So we're talking about practicalities now.
What happens next?
Predictably, the government has said
that it's going to appeal this.
It's my understanding that it's not appealable,
but that might not stop the Supreme Court
from intervening here.
So put a pin in it.
We will see.
But Judge Boasberg gave the government the option
to cure contempt by simply returning those individuals
that it had expelled in violation of his order.
He also instructed the government
to identify the individual who gave the relevant directives
to ignore
his orders and not return the planes.
So there are things that the government can do.
And maybe they're pretty easy to do.
I mean, he's not asking for a kidney here.
He's just like, let me know who put you up to this.
Turn the planes around.
Fix it.
Or we can play hardball.
We can do this the easy way, or we can do this the hard way.
And that's a big deal.
We said the fact that an order finding probable cause for contempt isn't appealable might
not stop the Supreme Court.
And it certainly doesn't seem like it's going to stop the DC circuit.
A two to one DC circuit panel with the two being Trump appointees issued an administrative
stay of Judge Boasberg's order finding probable cause for criminal contempt.
Please note that Judge Boasberg's order finding probable cause for criminal contempt. Please note that Judge
Boesberg's order did not find anyone in particular in contempt and it contemplated further proceedings
before the court would actually do anything. That is not an appealable order, but that wasn't going
to stop the best lawyers this administration never had, Judge Rao and Judge Katzis. Now some of you
might be wondering how is criminal contempt possible
if the Supreme Court concluded that Judge Boesberg's order halting the expulsions was invalid
because the case had been filed in the wrong court via the wrong mechanism. There's actually
a prior Supreme Court decision that said you can still find an individual in contempt of a court order,
even if the underlying order is invalid.
And that is a pretty infamous decision, I think,
of the Supreme Court, Walker v. City of Birmingham.
And it's infamous, of course, because there,
the Supreme Court upheld a criminal contempt finding
against the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.,
who was denied permission to march, marched anyway, and then was held in contempt of the court order that
denied permission to march.
So that's the law.
And if you're thinking that's a Warren Court precedent, Leah,
I don't know if the Supreme Court will abide by it.
Fair, I hear you, but this is a
bad-worn court precedent and one that upheld the conviction of Dr. King, so I think Sam Alito will
be fine with it. He'll be very cross-pressured, that's for sure. That's true. At least there's
cross-pressure. Yeah. Wow. All right. I showed up today. You sure did. I did. I'm just going to let you cook.
OK.
Judge Paula Zinas, who is handling the Abrego Garcia
case, also seems to be plumb out of patience with these goons.
In a hearing last week, she read the government lawyers
for absolute filth and told them to get their shit together
and start answering her questions.
There is no passing in this cold call, bitches,
was basically the energy.
And I'm not gonna lie.
I have to say, her energy was really something.
And it just sort of jumped off the pages of the transcript.
I mean, she basically was like,
hey, bitches, have you read Laura Hillenbrand's epic book
about an underdog horse who comes back to beat war admiral?
No, you haven't? Well, you should,
because I'm about to ride you like sea
biscuit if you don't answer these questions.
That was basically the energy.
What the fuck do you mean?
You don't have answers for me.
You better have some answers.
Anyway, I was a very black mom.
I felt seen in a lot of ways.
So we will say more about those proceedings in a second.
But as the courts work through whether they
can prod this administration along
toward observing constitutional norms
and returning someone who is wrongfully expelled because
of a quote unquote paperwork error
and who received no due process in the course of his rendition
to a foreign gulag, we just wanted
to note that this week we also got some very pointed reminders of
why due process is, in fact, so important.
Yeah.
So first, the administration is mistakenly, I hope mistakenly, sending deportation notices
to citizens.
So Nicole Mishroni posted on Blue Sky that she had received a notice of deportation.
She is a United States citizen.
And are they seriously going to mistakenly deport US citizens,
like air quotes mistakenly?
Second, the administration could not even
spell Mr. Obrego Garcia's first or last name correctly
in some of the district court filings over the last week.
This is sloppy AF, which is why due process is important. That is how
mistakes get made and due process is how we identify those mistakes and rectify
them. And that is why I think people actually are pretty exercised correctly
about a Bregow-Garcia but the fact that the claims they are making apply with
full force to anyone. Yes. Lawful resident, unlawful resident, naturalized citizen, somebody born a citizen.
Literally if they say, once we have mistakenly sent you away, the law can't help you, like
that applies to everyone.
But you know who doesn't agree with the claim I just made?
Our esteemed vice president, who took to X last week to basically
whine about how due process makes a lot of work for the government and so we should dispense
with it.
I mean, this was a pretty stunning trip.
I thought real men liked hard work.
Put those men to work observing due process.
Not this guy.
I mean, it was, first of all, I didn't, I don't know, I guess X has completely dispensed with character limits. I'm not on it anymore, so I will occasionally see, but
he literally wrote a whole ass essay. I mean, a really bad one, but a whole ass essay on
X that is essentially a claim that due process is expensive and inconvenient and so no longer
required. And I just, you want to get, let me just say one thing, which is that first of all, if I had taught this guy constitutional law, I would hide my head in
a bag to borrow a phrase from Justice Scalia. And I will just say I do hope that there is
some soul searching happening at Yale Law School right now. And the last thing I'll
say is everything he says about due process being expensive and burdensome applies equally
to potentially respecting First Amendment rights, the lawmaking process in which Congress
has to agree on language and then pass the law, the president then signs it, also applies
to the appointment and confirmation process for principal officers. I mean, essentially
the whole Constitution is pretty inconvenient when you stop to think about it. And I welcome
that that wisdom emanating from the mouth of JD Vance because I think that's where
this takes us. Melissa, sorry.
No, no, no. I just wanted to note that there is a period around,
I don't know, 2017, when all of the men's were crowing
about how important due process was
when people were posting on Twitter
and making spreadsheets about whether or not there were men
who had sexually harassed them or assaulted them or whatever
and gotten away with it.
And during those moments, I too agreed that due process was vitally important,
because these couldn't be itinerant commitments.
But here we are.
Yes.
Well, I also think they are going
to have renewed interest in due process
during any contempt proceedings that may arise.
Good point.
My guess is there due process, maybe due process,
will be demanded and insisted upon.
Speaking of substantive due process,
Secretary of State Marco Rubio also
announced that 10 additional individuals were
sent to El Salvador as part of what he describes as a,
quote unquote, alliance with El Salvadoran President Bukele
and the President of the United States.
And I just want to note, I don't know who might be listening,
but pro tip, if you're a masculine administration
with masculine energy and you are in an alliance
with someone, that probably means
that you have some kind of power parity with the other party,
which means that you probably have the power to
facilitate the return of any individual who is in that other party's custody. I mean,
that is my understanding of how masculinity works. I may be wrong about this, but that
was my understanding of how it worked for men. Am I wrong?
Wouldn't know. Also my understanding.
Speaking of masculine energy, Senator Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, which is the state
where Mr. Abrego Garcia resided before his erroneous expulsion to El Salvador, Senator
Van Hollen went to El Salvador in an effort to meet with President Bukele and see Mr.
Abrego Garcia.
He was denied an opportunity to do either of those things. He did get the chance to meet with the El Salvadoran
VP, who he says told him, quote,
that the Trump administration is paying the government
of El Salvador to keep Abrego Garcia at CCOT.
That's the El Salvadoran mega prison, which suggests,
I'm just spitballing here, that the administration could just
call Amex or Venmo or whatever payment system
it is using at this point and just say,
put a hold on my card and those payments to El Salvador
until Abrego Garcia is safely returned to the United States.
I mean, that could happen.
Or literally, Trump could just open his mouth
and say to Bekele, send him back.
That would work, too.
Yeah.
So in one of the more genuinely moving and hopeful moments
of the last however many weeks and months,
Senator Van Hollen, after initially being refused
permission to see Kilmar Abrago-Garcia,
refused to leave until Van Hollen saw him.
And you know what?
When Van Hollen took a stand and made these demands,
Bukele gave in.
Bukele relented and produced Mr. Abrago-Garcia
for a meeting with the Senator.
I'm going to try not to turn into a ball of goo, but it is hard to overstate the relief at just
knowing Mr. Abrego-Garcia is alive. What a comfort to his family in this horrible time. This is a
huge testament to Senator Van Hollen and also to what can be done with moral clarity, a backbone,
and sustained public attention and public pressure.
It turns out real men can get Buckeye
to make it so that wrongfully expelled and wrongfully
imprisoned people are no longer in prison.
They could just put Mr. Obrego Garcia on a plane
back to the country.
An American plane did manage to land in El Salvador despite the federal government suggestion
that it's just impossible to order planes and people to a foreign sovereign.
On a lighter note, Bukele reportedly staged the photo or the photos that emerged from
this meeting and that involved staging drinks in front of Van Hollen and Abrego Garcia. And if you zoom in, you see the drinks
wearing glasses with a salted rim and a maraschino cherry.
As someone who consumes a lot of maraschino cherries
and a lot of drinks with maraschino cherries,
I can report to you that there are zero recognized drinks
with both a salted rim and a maraschino cherry.
Turns out these weak weenies cannot even
make a proper drink. Nope. These weak weenies insist they are weak weenies with no masculine
energy and that they cannot do anything that would even possibly get El Salvador to return
Mr. Abrego Garcia or even consider returning Mr. Abrego Garcia nothing. They are completely powerless.
This was a really bad week for alpha male vibes
or masculine energy at the White House
as Vice President JD Vance managed
to drop the National Football Championship Trophy
while the Ohio State University visited the White House.
To be fair to our sofa king, the trophy
is formulated such that it's detachable from the base.
But I don't believe anyone has actually dropped it and detached it from its base before the press corps thus far.
So I could not. I watched that video 10 times easily. Oh, yeah.
ASMR. Right. I mean, there's very little arguments that this had to do it for me. Yeah. Yep. They really are like, they're such beta boy.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, we're going to find out in a week
that they're actually wife guys.
Another part of this that is so calling to me
is some of the things that the administration claims
that they absolutely cannot do include things
like gassing up a plane and sending it to El Salvador
or sending any individuals to
a foreign sovereign. And I just note that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has
managed to take, I think, at least one plane to El Salvador and get into the mega prison
and take selfies there. So these things- Videos, she made content, content creation.
These things do not seem insurmountable.
At least one Republican member of Congress, right?
Also there last week.
And also the El Salvador president, Bukele,
has sent people back, who the United States sent to him.
So he returned and did not accept several women
that the Trump administration
had put on planes to El Salvador.
So that is masculine energy. We're going to make this prison like VMI bitches. Watch.
I just have to say, I would really love, I feel like we don't know enough about
the backstory there, how these women were mistakenly included on the plane and what
the sequence of events that led to their being returned was. And I just hope that
the enterprising folks at ProPublica or elsewhere are looking into that because I think it's important.
Lyle Ornstein Totally agree.
Danielle Pletka So as the administration continues, wildly
implausibly and honestly kind of pathetically, to insist that it is powerless to say or do
anything that might influence a foreign leader with whom they previously made an agreement
to detain people. The proceedings back here
in Maryland before Judge Zinnis are ongoing. So the judge granted Abrego Garcia's request
for expedited discovery. Those requests are going to play out over the next week or so.
So unless the administration tries to mandamus her and block discovery, there isn't going
to be further action in that case beyond government filings in the district court. Although it
actually does seem as though the administration is trying to appeal her modified
order in the case in which she literally just modified her previous order to quote the language
of the Supreme Court's order, not typically a thing you can take to the appeals courts,
and yet that's not seeming to stop them.
I love that she basically did a heap eat of the court.
They're like, we're going to appeal that.
We're going to appeal it. Yep.
Yeah.
And their filings thus far have actually
been shocking in their bad faith.
They have refused to answer the questions she's asked.
They've adopted insane and implausible readings
of both her order and the Supreme Court order that
narrowed the scope of hers.
And it's straight out of the Stephen Miller School of hers. And I mean, it's like straight out of the Stephen Miller
School of Law.
And they've doubled down on their refusal
to answer her questions.
And the subsequent filings reiterate
that they don't have anything else to add,
as though that were the end of the matter.
I mean, it's actually insane.
So the Fourth Circuit declined to stay Judge Sinise's order,
which again just recited the Supreme Court's order,
the heapete.
Judge Wilkinson wrote an opinion that came down hard
on DOJ's arguments, rightfully so.
He described them as, quote,
shocking not only to judges,
but to the intuitive sense of liberty
that Americans far removed from courthouses
still hold dear."
He is really sounding all the alarms.
Go off King.
Absolutely.
It seems as if Judge Wilkinson's clarion call to action and Senator Van Hollen's emphatic
statements resonated because on Saturday morning, 1 a.m. on Saturday morning specifically,
we got a remarkable order from the Supreme Court.
The order came about because the administration was allegedly making noises about subjecting
even more people to the illegal renditions to El Salvador.
As we've previously mentioned, an order from the Southern District of Texas, among
other places, protected people in certain jurisdictions from being expelled to the foreign
mega prison.
So the government allegedly moved people to the northern district of Texas, handed them
notices in English only, telling them they had to sign them and were about to be imminently
deported and the notices were Alien Enemies Act notifications.
A nice reminder about when and why nationwide injunctions, while generally not necessary
and often inappropriate, sometimes are warranted, like when the government is shuffling people around to summarily expel them without due process to a foreign mega prison and
then insist they cannot get them back. Anyways, the ACLU immediately requested a temporary
restraining order in the Northern District of Texas and sought to certify a class action.
The temporary restraining order was denied and the class action request deferred, at which point the ACLU went to both the Fifth Circuit and the Supreme Court and back to
the Northern District of Texas judge and back to Judge Boasberg trying to halt these imminent
renditions. Judge Boasberg held a hearing during which it came out that the government
had moved people to the Northern District of Texas and couldn't really explain why
it had done so. Maybe putting them in a jurisdiction where summary expulsions weren't prohibited? I'm sure that can't
be it. The government also said there wouldn't be any flights Friday when the
hearing was happening, but couldn't rule out Saturday flights and while it was
willing to say that the named plaintiffs in the case wouldn't be expelled, it
wouldn't slash couldn't rule out expelling other individuals in the
proposed class. So early Saturday morning, we got a Supreme Court order
instructing the government not to remove anyone
until further action by the Supreme Court.
Justices Thomas and Alito noted their dissents,
and the order said that a statement by Alito
would be forthcoming.
This is a bad signal to Jody Cantor and The New York Times
to inspect the flags at House Alito.
More on this in a bit.
The Supreme Court also instructed the Solicitor General to quickly file an application after
some action in the Fifth Circuit, which there was after the Supreme Court's order.
The Fifth Circuit, perhaps unsurprisingly, would not have granted the plaintiff's relief.
Look, I'm no optimist or SCOTUS fan, but the Supreme Court's order is actually encouraging.
One, it seems like a majority of the court
is willing to actually hold the administration to the law,
at least in some cases.
The order was truly remarkable in that it
issued before the Fifth Circuit had acted
and before Alito had a statement ready to go.
And I took this as another sign that public pressure works.
Maybe this wasn't just influenced
by Judge Wilkinson's powerful writings and Senator Van
Hollen's actions, but from what emerged in the emergency
hearing Judge Boasberg held, specifically
the government's unwillingness to say they wouldn't deport
other class members and the suggestion
that the government had moved some people to the Northern
District of Texas.
But in some respects, the most encouraging aspect
of this action is that the court, or at least seven members of the court, may finally be recognizing that maybe these guys in the Trump administration aren't totally on the up and up, and that maybe you can't treat them like any other normal administration that acts in good faith.
The court had ordered the administration to give detainees reasonable time and notice to allow challenges, but the government isn't doing that and it seems like seven justices just weren't willing to assume the government
is acting in good faith.
But back to House Alito, flag watch.
So Justice Alito eventually released his dissent, which was joined by Justice Thomas, and it
seems as though this issue, whether to take the administration at its word, may have been
the dividing line.
So the five pagepage descent rattles
off a series of procedural irregularities with the court's order, the timing, whether petitioners
sought emergency relief in lower courts first, the Supreme Court not waiting for the Fifth
Circuit's decision, not waiting for the government's response, etc. Justice Alito also specifically
faulted the court for acting when, quote, an attorney representing the government informed the
district court that no such deportations were then
planned to occur either yesterday or today, end quote.
That's not what the government lawyer said.
He just said he wasn't aware of flights Saturday.
Also, Alito appears totally unfazed by the fact
that there is now video of ICE buses with Venezuelan
nationals on the way to airports that then turned around in the chaotic days of this emergency litigation. The order is a typical
grievance-laden Alito rant. It accuses the ACLU of providing little support
for the suggestion that the applicants were in danger of removal. You know, I
guess the notices which don't mention the right to challenge their detentions
don't count. The Alito hissy-rit, hissy-fit, ends with
quote, both the executive and the judiciary have an obligation to follow the law. The
executive must proceed under the terms of our order in Trump versus JGG, and this court
should follow established procedures, end quote. Just pause over this one for a second.
Yes, the man whose house displayed not one one but two flags associated with January 6th
while participating in at least three cases involving January 6th says we should just assume
that the executive and the judiciary follow the law and take them at their word. And he's joined,
of course, by Clarence Thomas, the man who receives untold amounts of largesse from billionaires with
interest before the Supreme Court. Tell me more about how we should assume officials comply with
the law, my guys, especially when the White House
Twitter account is posting pictures of Mr. Abrego Garcia
saying he's never coming back.
The 72 order also had some curious language in it.
It said, quote, there is before the court an application,
end quote, rather than the usual the application presented
to Justice Alito and referred by him to the court.
The way these applications work is the applications
are directed to a single justice, the circuit justice,
who oversees the particular circuit where
the application came from.
Here, that's Justice Alito.
And then for significant applications like this,
the justice usually refers the matter to the court
for everyone to vote.
So did Sam Alito not refer this application to the full court?
Was he just sitting on it until it would be too late?
Did his colleagues bypass him?
Unclear.
You know, the docket says the matter was referred to the court, but very curious listeners.
Fingers crossed for some Jodie Cantor-Joan Biscupic story here.
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We have another entry in the what the fuck shit is this segment. This is some breaking news we got
while recording, and that is that the Supreme Court has scheduled
for argument the Trump administration's requests
to stay in significant respects, to put on hold
in significant respects the orders that prevent them
from implementing their wildly unconstitutional plan to strip birthright
citizenship from certain individuals.
Now, I want to quickly explain what issue is actually
before the court, because the administration did not
ask the Supreme Court to review whether their efforts
to strip birthright citizenship are legal.
Instead, the question they asked the courts to take up
is whether it was permissible for the lower courts
in these cases to issue nationwide injunctions
to prevent the administration from implementing this policy
on a nationwide basis.
But the practical effect of the court ruling
against nationwide injunctions here
would give the administration ostensibly a green light
to implement this policy in large swaths of the United
States.
And we are going to go off on this shit in a second.
But I just want to note at the outset
that the idea that the court would take up
the nationwide injunction issue in this case is utter garbage.
One, they had numerous opportunities to do so
when courts were enjoining Biden administration policies.
They turned away those efforts.
Apparently no concern there.
And second, if there is any case
in which a nationwide injunction is appropriate,
it would be an injunction
against the birthright citizenship EO
because how are you going to implement an injunction against the birthright citizenship EO, because how are you going
to implement an injunction against that policy on a state by state basis, determine where
people are born and can they travel in the United States?
It makes no effing sense.
Thoughts?
Who are the four?
I took four people to grant cert here.
Yep.
Who do you think they are?
Well, Gorsuch has been railing against these nationwide injunctions for a while.
I am sure Gorsuch. been railing against these nationwide injunctions for a while.
I am sure Gorsuch.
Yeah.
My guess is Justice Thomas.
I think he has indicated rather selective views
on the propriety of nationwide injunctions.
Alito, because this could help the administration.
Right.
Alito, because this could help the administration.
And then you probably get a J4, right, from one of Brett or Amy or even the Chiefie.
And OK, so here is my goblin villain
take on what is happening.
I think there is a chance, and still a greater than 50%
chance, that the court rules against the Trump
administration on these birthright citizenship applications.
So I think they're going to reject the administration's
request to narrow the scope of the injunctions in this case.
And I think the chief probably and other justices
love the idea of buying themselves some goodwill,
some credibility, and cover for when they inevitably
give the administration a green light
on a host of other atrocities,
be it refusing to get Mr. Obrego Garcia
back in the United States, right?
Be it allowing the administration
to implement this insane AEA policy,
be it dismantling the administrative state,
be it unconstitutionally coercing law firms,
the media, educational institutions,
like who knows what they're gonna do,
but my guess is they saw this as kind of like a freebie
for them.
Hey, guess what citizens,
we're going to acknowledge that you're citizens.
Right, that's like the best case scenario to hope for here.
I think that's astute and very likely right.
The thing that's hard for me to figure is that
I think that the credibility that they could buy
is only going to come on the substantive question. If they're going to reject the policy.
But are people going to perceive that? No, people are not.
Trump administration gets ruled against, right? Supreme Court rules against Trump administration
on birthright citizenship. That's what the headlines are going to say.
The thing I'm worried about is what if that means they're ultimately going to allow,
they're going to rule against it on this sort of injunction issue.
And then next fall, they're going to have the actual substantive question and allow.
I mean, they can't possibly allow this order in its entirety.
They can't allow it to people who are lawfully here and have kids as the order purports to
do.
And I also think there's the statutory question, which is like whether or not the Constitution
requires birthright citizenship, which it definitely does.
Congress has passed laws conferring citizenship, so you can't by executive order do this anyway, whatever the Constitution has to say about it.
Laws are for losers, Kate.
Correct.
That's true.
Statutes are for suckers.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's good a little bit.
Kate, you and your reading, why do you keep reading the Constitution as the words matter?
We're reading it, and they're reading it, I guess.
Leah, you make an excellent point, though,
about the selectivity of this court's antipathy
for nationwide injunctions.
And I also think it's a really astute point
and a clarion call to the media to think about how it chooses
to cover this case,
because the media will absolutely
shape the narrative around what the ultimate disposition
of this.
And they really have to get it right here.
I'm going to take this moment to do
a sua sponte, a spontaneous plug, for my book, Lawless,
How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe
Theories, and Bad Vibes.
Because I talk about how the justices
try to cultivate this sense with the media
and how the media goes along with it
and how that enables them to do all
of a good amount of this horse shit.
Sorry.
It's just so frustrating.
It's happening right before our eyes.
Wait, is this argument, I feel like this argument
and your pub date are going be very close. Same week.
Yeah, yeah. So the book is out May 13th. Maybe this argument is May 15th.
Maybe this is for you, Leah. Maybe Justice Alito is like, you know what? I've done so much to Leah Littman.
I'm gonna give her this one. Is this giving me something? I'm gonna make her pub week epic.
Wow, this is going to be great.
Your book's going to be so relevant the week it comes out.
Justice Alito was like, I'm going to do Leah solid.
Thank you, sir.
Thanks, Sam.
If he wanted to do me a solid, he
could have resigned two years ago and let Elizabeth Prelogger
replace him.
But you know.
Don't put that resignation energy out there,
because there is an embryo somewhere in Idaho
waiting to be appointed to the court.
A men's rights embryo.
You're right.
Exactly.
I can't imagine anything worse.
So I'm fine with it with you putting the kind of retire now Sam energy out there personally.
See Kate, that's because you're an optimist.
Sorry.
That is your optimism.
That is Pete Kate optimism. It can't get worse. That is your optimism. Wow.
That is Pete-Kate optimism.
It can't get worse.
It can't get worse than Sam Alito.
Yeah.
The others I think it get worse than, but him I don't think so.
But in any event, so that's May 15 is going to be that oral argument.
So we will be on this case.
I will actually be in DC then.
Oh.
You should go.
Hey, Sam.
What's up?
We should go to oral argument.
Okay.
So there is other immigration related news we wanted to flag, and that is that last week
ICE arrested another Columbia student and green card holder Mohsen Madhawi.
Madhawi was arrested when he showed up for a naturalization interview, right?
He's a green card holder.
He was on the path to naturalize as a citizen,
and instead he was picked up by ICE. Like the arrest and detention of Mahmoud Khalil, this
is an outrage. I don't know about you guys, but I've spent a bunch of time in the last
few days like watching videos. He did a 60-minute appearance, he did another CBS interview.
I crawled under my desk and cried, not even exaggerating, watching some of these interviews.
Like this is a person who says things like the fight for freedom of Palestine
and the fight against anti-Semitism go hand in hand.
Justice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.
This person was a philosophy student and a peace activist and the interviews with his
friends and colleagues at Columbia are so wrenching.
And his name, like the name of Mr. Abrego Garcia, like the name of Mahmoud Khalil is
a name that people should know.
This is just an outrageous what have we become moment.
All right, I feel like with Kate taking on that kind of energy,
it's down to me to be the optimist here
and bring this up a little.
So we did get a little bit of positive news this week
in that we learned that Harvard University has chosen
to stand on business.
So listeners, you have likely heard
that the Trump administration has taken aim
at Ivy League universities.
This seems to be some kind of campaign
to basically make the Ivy League Hillsdale College.
And in order to do that, the administration
has threatened to withdraw crucial federal funding
for research and medical care, among other things,
if the universities do not accede to the administration's
demands.
And those demands include limiting faculty governance,
taking action against student protesters,
curbing DEI and hiring at admissions,
and even placing certain academic departments
into federal receivership.
It is an unprecedented assault on academic freedom.
Indeed, one individual characterized it as, quote,
10 or 100-fold worse than Joe McCarthy's 1950s era attack
on universities in the name of curbing communism.
So it's real, and it's terrible.
But notably, resistance in the academy seemed thin to date.
So some institutions like Columbia capitulated quickly,
which only seemed to embolden the administration
to make more increasingly intrusive demands.
But here's the glimmer of good news.
Now one university, Harvard, has made clear
that it will not go gently into that good night.
It quote, will not go gently into that good night. It, quote, will not
surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights.
COLLEEN O'BRIEN Okay, this is a very big deal. Obviously,
Harvard has a sizable endowment and is wealthy by any standard, but it is still dependent on
federal funding for a wide range of its operations, which is to say it has a lot of skin in the game.
And it is standing on business because it rightly believes the administration's demands are a bridge too far.
They have likely also surmised, as law firms have,
I think, been learning, that when
you try to make a deal with a bully,
the bully keeps coming back to bully you.
The thing about bullies is it's not ordinarily
their jam to just shake you down once and then go on their way and never bother you again. It's not really how bullies is it's not ordinarily their jam to just shake you down once and then go on their
way and never bother you again. It's not really how bullies roll.
Bullies are basically like glitter, right? I mean, like you just can't get rid of it.
Yes. Right. All of this seems like it has been a very
buoying moment for academia, which I want to just put a note under this, makes it very
likely that the administration is going to continue to retaliate against Harvard.
And I'm just going to say, I really
hope that the university will continue
to receive public support for its leadership
in this crucial moment, because it is out there
in uncharted waters in an unprecedented time,
and it is standing up for academic freedom.
And I hope the public supports that.
If anyone can fight, it's Harvard.
But Harvard can't fight alone.
I have not given money to Harvard.
I went there for undergrad.
I gave money to them for the first time
after this announcement.
And as Melissa suggested, the administration
is likely going to try to escalate.
And their response has been to float
the prospect of an all-out, all-government war
against Harvard.
So they suggested, the president did, that maybe they would take away Harvard's tax-exempt status.
This would also be illegal. They also suggested that maybe they would rescind Harvard's ability to matriculate students on certain visas.
But these responses just seem to be proving that all of this is about retaliation and extortion
and punishment for ideological views.
And other schools are also now thinking
about how they will respond to the administration's demands.
And I do think courage begets courage.
So the Rutgers Faculty Senate has
proposed a Big Ten Academic Alliance Mutual Defense
Pact, which would facilitate collective action
if the administration targeted any of the schools in the alliance. In a letter dated March 27th, we briefly mentioned this,
the House Committee on Education and the workforce had told Northwestern University that they had to
turn over the budgets and the funders for the law school's 20 plus legal clinics, as well as
the personnel file of one professor, Professor Sheila Betty, director of Northwestern Law's Community Justice
and Civil Rights Clinic.
And these demands came because the House did not
like one of the clients the clinic was representing.
Professor Betty said, not today.
Satan and she and another Northwestern clinic leader
sued to prevent the turning over of those records to Congress.
Their lawsuit claims that the House Committee on Education
and the workforce is working, quote,
in tandem with the Trump administration
to target universities and perceived ideological enemies.
And notably, the lawsuit names as defendants
Northwestern University and its president, Michael Schill,
because those are the individuals or entities that
would have had to surrender the records to the House Committee. So they are sort of framed as nominal defendants here.
Lyle Ornstein So it turns out that when faced with a lawsuit
from actual law professors arguing that the committee investigation and the attached request
for records was a bunch of political bullshit that wastes universities time and your tax
dollars and is all lawful in about six different ways to boot,
the committee blinked.
It withdrew its request for records
on the day that there was a hearing scheduled in court.
So the Center for Constitutional Rights,
which together with the Chicago law firm Loewe and Loewe
represented the two law professors,
described this as a quote,
"'victory for academic freedom, the rule of law,
and bedrock constitutional principles.
So really important lesson here, you
can't win if you don't fight.
And if you fight, you sometimes win.
And on that note, since we last recorded,
another law firm decided to fight not fold.
So Sussman Godfrey, represented by the great Don Verrilli
from Munger Tolls, Sussman was targeted
with an executive order, and they decided
that they would not capitulate.
Instead, they filed suit challenging the executive order.
District Judge Lauren Ollicon very quickly
issued a temporary restraining order, the fourth of its kind,
and had the following to say, quote,
the executive order specifically targets lawyers because
of the clients that they represented.
The executive order is based on a personal vendetta
against a particular firm.
And frankly, I think the framers of our Constitution would view it as a shocking abuse of power." During the hearing,
she also observed that, quote, law firms across the country are entering into agreements with
the government out of fear that they will be targeted next and that coercion is plain and
simple. And while I wish other firms were not capitulating as readily, I admire firms like Sussman for standing up and challenging it when it does threaten the very existence
of their business," end quote.
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Okay so the court is returning this week from its spring break for a full two
weeks of argument in its last regular sitting of the year although as we just
said there will be this additional May sitting for the birthright citizenship
case. This April sitting is the first sitting with the newly confirmed Solicitor General
John Sauer on board. So I'm guessing we will hear from him, although we haven't seen those
day calls yet. But in any event, we're going to jump right in and preview the major cases
on deck for this week because there are some big ones.
First up is Kennedy versus Braidwood management. This is an appeal from the Fifth Circuit.
So naturally, it will have major consequences
for the future of the administrative state
and executive power, as well as health care
for marginalized groups.
Here's the background.
Under the Affordable Care Act, the Department of Health
and Human Services Preventative Services Task Force
may direct private insurers to cover certain categories
of preventative care.
So it has decided to include within that list PrEP, which
is used to prevent HIV infection for at-risk individuals.
A group of business owners has challenged the ACA's coverage
of PrEP on the ground that the medication encourages,
quote, homosexual behavior in violation
of their religious beliefs.
They are represented by Jonathan Mitchell,
the conservative lawyer who was the architect
of SB8, the Texas bounty hunter law that ended abortion access in the Lone Star State months
before Dobbs did so on a national basis.
He also successfully argued on behalf of Donald Trump in the Colorado Disqualification Challenge
back in February 2024.
So to be clear, all of this sounds a lot like Hobby Lobby. That was the case in which business owners made a conscience
exemption to the contraceptive mandate in the Affordable Care
Act that was back in 2014.
This case is slightly different.
The question that the litigants are pressing before the court
and that the court has agreed to hear
isn't about conscience exemptions per se,
but rather whether the structure of the Preventative Services
Task Force violates the Appointments Clause. So they prevailed on this question about conscience exemptions per se, but rather whether the structure of the Preventative Services
Task Force violates the Appointments Clause.
So they prevailed on this question in the district court
and at the Fifth Circuit, which agreed
that members of the task force are,
quote unquote, principal officers and not
inferior officers.
And thus, their appointments have
to be subject to the Appointments Clause.
So this is more of an administrative law executive
power question.
COLLEEN O'BRIEN And not just subject to the appointments clause, but if they're principal
officers, they have to be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. And
these are part-time task force members, and it's preposterous to suggest that they are
principal officers. So the Biden administration challenged the ruling when it came down from
the Fifth Circuit, and notably, the Trump administration has continued with that same position.
So the administration argues that these task force
members are inferior officers because they cannot make
any legally binding final decisions without the secretary's
permission, and the secretary can remove them at will.
So although the administration is arguing
that the Preventative Services Task Force as structured
is constitutional,
they did slightly modify the position
of the Biden administration in that their position is
that the Secretary of Health and Human Services
can modify the Preventative Services Task Force decisions.
So that would mean America's new chief scientists
slash vaccine skeptic and anti-fluoride crusader,
R.F.K. Jr. would have the power to revise
the task force determinations.
Not great, like he may very well cross out PrEP
and write in ketamine, heroin or dead bear carcasses.
Anything could happen.
The government also argues here that even if there is an Appointments Clause violation,
the appropriate remedy is to sever the offending statutory provision that insulates the task
force from secretarial supervision, not to bar the task force prospectively from exercising
significant government authority absent new legislation.
So again, this is sort of a sale
of law kind of argument. We just like cut out the offending part.
I mean, I have to say it's hard to know what to root for here. The idea that these outside
experts are principal officers, again, as I said before, pretty absurd to my mind. So
I hope the court reverses that finding. But, you know, in terms of the practical impact,
as Leah just said, either the court is going
to accept this argument that the HHS secretary can override task force recommendations, which
means a shit show for public health.
But given who this administration, I would imagine, will want to have on the preventative
services task force, if it has the power to change the composition of it, I'm not sure
things are going to be much better.
So I guess I hope they don't create any additional bad law
regarding the appointment clause here,
like literally everybody in the federal government
is a principal officer and they all
have to be confirmed by the Senate
or they can't be in the government at all,
you know, something along those lines.
And just to-
You're assuming we're going to have a government
with departments and agencies and heads of them.
Which is one other thing I'll say is like,
obviously Leah was joking about, or maybe not, about,
you know, crossing out PrEP and adding in dead bear carcasses.
I didn't think that was a joke.
But maybe not, hard to know right now.
But it would still be the case that the HHS secretary's determination would be subject
to, I know this sounds quaint, but legal constraints like the requirement that government not engage
in arbitrary and capricious decision making.
So that would in theory be a constraint on the ability of kind of politicals to override
the determinations or recommendations made by this task force.
How do you think that argument is going to fare before America's other chief scientist,
Matthew Kazimirich?
He is all in on the bear carcasses.
So he'll probably be pretty excited about that.
Ladies always choose the bear.
Dead or alive.
The court will also hear this week,
Parrish versus the United States.
This is a case that's really about notice of appeal.
So as a general matter, litigants
must file a notice of appeal within 30 or 60
days of an adverse judgment.
However, under a federal statute and federal rule
of appellate procedure for district courts
can reopen an expired appeal period
when a party doesn't receive timely notice of the judgment.
But there is actually a circuit split
as to whether a notice of appeal that
is filed after the expiration of the ordinary appeal period
but before the appeal period is reopened
becomes effective once reopening is granted.
So the court is going to take up and resolve that question.
So a smaller, more discrete issue
amidst some very important big cases this week.
The court is also going to hear Commissioner of Internal Revenue
versus Zuck.
This is a statutory interpretation case
involving a provision of the tax code.
Usually, when the IRS seeks to levy your property to secure a tax judgment, it has
to provide you with a pre-levy hearing. The question here is whether that pre-levy
hearing is still required in circumstances where there is no longer a
live dispute over the proposed levy that gave rise to the proceeding.
Another case that the court's going to hear this week is Diamond Alternative
Energy LLC versus the EPA. Guess who's going to hear this week is Diamond Alternative Energy LLC versus the EPA.
Guess who's going to win?
Exactly.
So here's the back story.
In 2021, the Biden administration
announced that it was going to try
to increase the number of zero emission vehicles on the road
as part of its efforts to address climate change.
To do this, the administration pursued
multiple regulatory avenues, including regulation by the EPA.
Under Section 209 of the Clean Air Act,
states are preempted from adopting
their own motor vehicle emission standards,
but that same provision provides an exception for California
to obtain a narrow waiver from federal preemption
if it can show that it, quote,
needs its own emission standards
to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions.
So in 2022, the Biden EPA granted the Golden State quote, needs its own emission standards to meet compelling and extraordinary conditions.
So in 2022, the Biden EPA granted the Golden State a waiver for its advanced clean cars program, which included a set of stringent greenhouse gas emission standards, as well as a mandate requiring
automakers to meet a 22% zero emission vehicle target by model year 2025. As Governor Gavin
Newsom explained, the measures were intended to quote,
end our reliance on fossil fuels.
And the petitioners who represent a range
of oil and gas constituencies took that personally,
immediately challenging the waiver on the ground
that its approval of California standards
is inconsistent with the major questions doctrine
and the plain text of section 209B,
which allows for a special California exemption
only for problems localized to and solvable in California, not for global issues like
climate change.
In order to establish their standing, the petitioners submitted 14 declarations explaining
that California standards target their products and will result in lower sales.
The Court of Appeals held the petitioners lacked Article 3 standing because they failed
to show that the resolution they sought would provide redress for their injuries. Specifically, the court concluded
that vacating EPA's waiver and thus eliminating California's, quote, coercive regulations
might not have any effect on car manufacturers' decisions about the composition of their fleets
given things like market demand. So the case could become a really important standing case,
either maybe negating or confirming that redressability
is a separate requirement from causation, right? So these are technically two different
prongs of the standing test. You need to show not only that you're being injured by the
thing that you're complaining about, but that the remedy you seek will actually fix or at
least partially redress your injury. But lots of students of constitutional law and maybe
sometimes even teachers of constitutional law and Fed courts and other topics have sometimes
struggled to really identify the relationship between the two.
Speaking just for myself here, you guys maybe
have not struggled with it.
But I do think this case could be important on the concept
of redressability.
The next case that we're going to cover is a biggie.
This is Mahmoud versus Taylor.
We briefly touched on some of these issues
when we covered the oral argument in United States
versus Skirmetty.
That was the challenge to Tennessee's law
prohibiting gender affirming care to minors.
We noted there that the court at the Biden administration's
behest only granted certiorari as
to one constitutional question, whether the Tennessee
law made a distinction on the basis of sex,
thereby triggering intermediate scrutiny
under the equal protection hierarchy.
We noted this because in the lower courts,
the case also presented another constitutional question.
That is, whether the law violated parents' rights
to make medical decisions for their children
without undue state interference.
The court did not have that question before it in Skirmetty,
and that was a point that Justice Barrett noted
in the Skirmetty oral argument.
It's also worth noting that just a mere six weeks
after the oral argument in Skirmetty,
the court took cert in this case, which, again,
tees up this question of parental rights squarely,
albeit in another very fraught context.
And the court will hear this case tomorrow.
Yeah, so it is a parental rights case, though not
a substantive due process case, which
was the alternative challenge in Scrimetti.
Here it's like a parent's religious rights challenge,
right?
So it's all related.
But so, OK, the case relates to a 2022 decision
by the Montgomery County Public Schools, Maryland's largest
school district,
efforts to select curricular material that better
represented its students and families.
So they selected a range of books
that included characters, families,
and historical figures from a range
of cultural, racial, ethnic, and religious backgrounds.
And these books included storybooks
such as Pride Puppy, which is about a puppy who gets
lost at the pride parade.
In selecting the books, the county engaged in what it describes as a, quote,
careful public participatory selection process that welcomed and incorporated parent feedback.
Well, that's where it went wrong. Shouldn't have done that. So having gone through this
careful process resulted in the selection of this group of books. In 2023, the county announced
that it was not going to allow parents to basically opt to have their children excuse
from instruction involving the storybooks. And that decision prompted a group of parents,
I think it's Muslim and Christian parents, to go to federal court to challenge this no-opt-out
policy. So a district court sided with the county and against the parents declined to
issue an order that would temporarily require the county to notify parents when the storybooks would
be used and give them a chance to opt out of instruction.
The Fourth Circuit upheld that order and noted that on the quote, threadbare record before
it, the parents had failed to show that exposure to the storybooks compelled them to violate
their religious beliefs.
Now, to be very clear, there is no circuit split here.
Every appellate court that is considered
this braided issue of religious rights and parent rights has concluded that simply being exposed to
certain issues in a public school curriculum does not actually burden the free exercise rights of
either parents or students, which is why it's really curious, interesting, shocking that the court decided to wade into what is essentially a
culture war to hear these intertwined religious freedom, parental rights claims that these
parents are asserting.
COLLEEN O'BRIEN And this is yet another one of these religion
slash culture war issue cases that is totally premature for the court to have taken up.
So I mentioned that the Fourth Circuit described the record in the case as threadbare.
It also noted that we do not know, quote, how any teacher or school employee has actually
used any of the storybooks in the parents' children's classrooms, how often the storybooks
are being used, what any child has been taught in conjunction with their use, what conversations
have ensued about their themes. This is one of these cases, kind of like 303 Creative,
that involves wholly speculative harms that have not come to pass. And I just want to quote, if it's okay, from a really good piece in Vox that
Ian Milhiser had about just how inadministrable the plaintiff's requested rule is and also
just kind of like how related that is to the fact that the court took this case up without
any factual development at all. So Ian writes, quote, suppose, for example, that during a
civics lesson on the structure of America's executive branch, a student raises their hand and asks whether any members
of President Donald Trump's cabinet are gay.
Is the teacher required to halt the lesson and immediately call every child's parents
to notify them that they might reveal the hidden knowledge that Treasury Secretary Scott
Besant is a gay man?
Or suppose a teacher asks their students to read a novel of their own choosing and deliver
an oral report on the book to that entire class.
Must that teacher also call a halt to a student's book report if the student selects, say, a book
that has a gay character or gay themes and the other students might hear about it? That kind of
harm from exposure to LGBTQ content is the heart of the parent's complaint. And what it might mean
on the ground in classrooms is something that the court is going to be deciding in the abstract in a vacuum
because there is no factual development yet before it.
Well, can I also make the point, and I think Justin Driver, who
is a professor at Yale Law School,
has made this point really well.
I mean, it's basically a kind of fly specking of curricula.
Like, it just allows the parents to sort of come in and veto it.
Or, I mean, you might think of it in these terms,
if you're the Supreme Court.
It's like allowing one parent to issue a nationwide injunction
on curricular content.
I'm really not kidding.
No, I know.
It's an absolute veto.
And it would just make it very hard, I think,
for school boards to function and to generate and create
curricula, given lots of people might disagree
about lots of different things. No, I mean, I think that this case should be understood as part of a broader
attack on public education.
Melissa, as you noted, and Kate, as you were indicating from Ian's piece, the
case could give parents the right to dictate what is taught in public schools.
And that just cannot be.
And, you know, as to the uncertainty in the record and the idea
that the case is premature, part of me
wonders if this is now an intentional strategy,
so that instead of waiting to see that the school is likely
going to implement the policy in a very reasonable way,
the justices can instead speculate about the potential.
Well, what if this horrible teacher opens up Pride puppy
and then tells the students that they are evil
if they don't like the Pride puppy?
And so, I don't know, I just feel like it is created
in parts to allow that kind of speculation.
Just to underscore, I think this is implicit
in what we've been saying,
but there just isn't a limiting principle
that the challengers and the Becket lawyers have identified.
So we're just basically talking about teachers.
This is how the ConLaw Scholars Brief that I thought was really good framed it.
The petitioner's theory basically invites this result where teachers are going to be
forced to create bespoke curricular plans for every student with a unique set of religious
objections and making it completely impossible to conduct public school education in a pluralistic society
actually may be the goal here.
Yes.
Yeah.
Great.
Perfect.
Right.
So I wanted to flag an amicus brief that was filed by several law professors, including
professors Michael McConnell and Rick Garnett.
This is an animus brief.
Sorry, not the brief that I was just meant to be clear.
Those are different con law professors than the ones I was just quoting from. Yes. Yeah. Yeah.
So other side of the case, right? This amicus brief is in support of the challengers and it urges
the court to say that the policy is invalid because the policy was motivated by animus
toward certain religions and religious believers.
And again, this just seems-
Pride puppy, pride puppy.
This seems to equate anything that certain religious
believers or certain religions do not like
with unconstitutional discrimination against them,
where the mere presence of LGBT individuals
and LGBT characters is an affront
and discrimination against these religious believers.
This is an attack on pluralism, right?
And it is really galling.
Yes.
So I want you to know that- It's also your book, Leah, FYI, I know I had been intending to like plug my book here. They're literally fucking writing the sequel in the final round of edits.
I noted this case just because I was like, this is where they're going next.
And yes, it is where they're going next. But, you know, in the case, Alan Schoenfeld is arguing on behalf of the schools from Wilmer
Hale, I'm super excited to see that I know he's going to do a great job even in the
face of all of this fuck shit.
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-♪ MUSIC PLAYING Each segue makes us a tight, a tight little episode. Well, all y'all Orissa stans can tell us if in fact this should be in the fuckshit part of the episode.
I don't think it should, honestly.
I think it probably depends whether you are representing plaintiffs or defendants in Orissa
cases.
Is that right?
This is an unanimous opinion.
Justice Alito has a separate concurrence in which Justices Thomas and Kavanaugh joined.
I'm like, should I look a little closer?
I don't know. It's been a busy week. I have not looked closely at all. in which Justices Thomas and Kavanaugh joined. And I'm like, should I look a little closer?
I don't know.
It's been a busy week.
I have not looked closely at all.
It just came out.
We literally just got this this morning.
We're just recapping.
We've got to dig in, obviously.
So briefly, the case we're talking about
is titled Cunningham versus Cornell University.
As we have said, it's an ERISA case.
It has to do with how plaintiffs can state a claim
under this section of the law,
Section 1106, which prohibits plan fiduciaries, so people who administer a healthcare plan
or a retirement plan, for example, from causing a plan to engage in certain transactions with
interested parties. So while this section generally prohibits such transactions, there
are exceptions elsewhere in the statute for various things like contracting or making
reasonable arrangements for office space or legal accounting or other services. So here, for example, Cornell is the administrator
that is the fiduciary for retirement plans. Cornell retained Fidelity and TIAA to offer
investment options for plan participants and then also served as a record keeper for those
plans. And a group of plaintiffs sued saying that because Fidelity and TIAA are parties
of interest, they could not be retained for these record-keeping purposes.
And the court unanimously held that to state a claim,
plaintiffs only have to mount allegations
that pertain to the elements of section 1106
without also making allegations about why
any exceptions don't apply.
Justice Sotomayor wrote the majority opinion
for the unanimous court.
But as briefly noted earlier, Justice Alito
filed a short concurrence in which both Justices Thomas
and Kavanaugh joined.
So we should probably look into that.
So as we are waiting for whatever
may come from the Supreme Court, one of the actions
we are awaiting their decision on concerns the government's
request for stays of the lower court's decisions that had blocked the president from firing the
heads of multi-member commissions, including the National Labor Relations Board and the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. While we are waiting for the Supreme Court to tell us on
the shadow docket whether Humphrey's executor and independent agencies are still a thing,
the President of the United States conveniently decided to remind the country that he would like to fire the chair of the Federal Reserve Board so that he, Donald Trump, may dictate interest rates for the country.
Makes me wonder, what are the interest rates for a penguin's going to be, pray tell. But yeah,
no, his truth social posts, like while this application is pending, said, quote,
Powell's termination cannot come fast enough. And again, this is relevant to the application
because if the Supreme Court allows the president to fire the heads of multi-member commissions,
well, the Fed is a multi-member commission.
And so the question will be,
can the president fire members of the Fed as well?
Again, possible the Supreme Court will distinguish this,
possible they won't and it will trigger another recession.
We don't know.
If the terrorists won't do it, the court will.
Right, exactly.
Exactly.
The president has taken some baby steps
toward attacking the Fed.
So he fired two Democratic board members
at the National Credit Union administration,
once again attacking the independence
of financial institutions and financial policy.
But we'll see.
I mean, if the court tries to do something toward it
and say whatever we're saying about the NLRB and the EEOC
doesn't apply to the Fed, it could try that. Or it could write something really broad that obviously
applies to the Fed or it could leave it ambiguous. And I think in the latter two scenarios, we
are in for just potentially another round of incredible market shocks because if Trump
tries to fire Powell, Powell has said he's going to fight in court. And so we could be
in for a period of protracted uncertainty
about who is actually in charge of monetary policy and interest rates for
the United States. Alright so I mean it feels like things have really gone off the rails
pretty hard this past week but it could get a lot crazier. Speaking of going off
the rails does anyone have an update from North Carolina?
LW – There are some updates. They'll probably be overtaken by the time this episode drops.
But as of Thursday afternoon, this is the case involving the effort by unsuccessful
North Carolina Supreme Court candidate Jefferson Griffin to un-lose the election he lost using
an insane legal theory that involves retroactively invalidating
lots of valid votes that happened to have been cast for Alison Riggs, who is a sitting
Supreme Court justice in the North Carolina Supreme Court and won another term.
So there was a ruling that we talked about in our last episode in which the Intermediate
Appeals Court accepted some of Griffin's insane arguments,
and the Supreme Court declined to put that ruling on hold.
So there is now ongoing litigation in the federal court.
So Riggs has asked for either a temporary restraining order or a preliminary injunction.
The district court denied that.
She is now in front of the Fourth Circuit asking for a stay.
At the same time, the State Board of Elections is proceeding with this
process for letting people cure their ballots that they cast back in November and are now
being told seven months later might not have been valid unless they produce some additional
evidence of their eligibility. The whole thing is absolutely insane. Now, some initial reporting
suggests that Riggs actually might be on track to win again the thing she
already won, even if this challenge is ultimately successful and the federal court litigation
doesn't actually yield any change, because it's a small number of ballots that Griffin's
insane effort has even thrown into question. And that whatever happens with those ballots
may not be enough to change the outcome, which was that Riggs won.
Can I just note the real point of all of this?
It might be just a longer term play.
I mean, I think, as you say, it's very likely that Alison
Rigg is going to win again.
Can't stop, won't stop.
Girls can do it.
But I think maybe part of this is sort of normalizing the idea
that we can, after the fact, go back and ask people to fix mistakes
that they didn't even know they were making
at the time they voted.
And you didn't mention this, Kate,
but I think it is worth noting that the bulk of the ballots
that need to be cured here are coming from Mecklenburg County.
That is where Charlotte is located.
Charlotte is a big blue dot in the middle of that purple state.
And this Supreme Court election is a big blue dot in the middle of that purple state and this Supreme Court election is a
big deal. And now this can just be extrapolated to other purple states or other states where
they want to do this as well.
Yeah. We should say that our friends at Vote Save America are helping sound the alarm on
what is happening and that there are these efforts underway to do ballot curing, even
though none of this should be necessary. It is. So if you are interested in getting involved in that,
you can go to votesaveamerica.com.
All right, while we're putting a pin in anti-democratic things
that we're watching, I just want to note one final thing.
And that is the Insurrection Act.
Listeners, you likely won't remember this because literally,
there were so much crap coming out of the administration
after January 20th that this particular executive order this because literally there were so much crap coming out of the administration after
January 20th that this particular executive order might not actually have registered with
you.
But among the executive orders issued on January 20th was an executive order that directed
various administration officials to meet and then report back to the president about the
propriety of invoking the Insurrection Act. We are taping on Thursday,
April 17th. The report on the propriety of invoking the Insurrection Act is due to the
president on Sunday, April 20th. Notably, on April 11th, the president signed an ominous
memorandum in which he authorized the military to take control of a swath of federal land along the U.S.-Mexico border, which may be a move perhaps to facilitate military arrests of non-citizens who
are trying to enter the country unlawfully on the ground that this now constitutes trespassing on
military property. I'm saying all of this just because I just want to flag that the prospect of
invoking the Insurrection
Act is really, really concerning.
The Insurrection Act is actually a series of five statutes that Congress enacted in
the 18th century and then amended in 1861 and 1871 to delegate to the president domestic
emergency authority that the Constitution has actually given to Congress to quote, provide
for calling forth the militia to execute the laws of the unions,
suppress insurrections and repel invasions.
It is among the president's most important
and most controversial domestic emergency powers.
And it has only been invoked a handful of times.
Indeed, the last time the president invoked
the Insurrection Act was in 1992,
when President George H.W. Bush called in the National Guard to Los Angeles
to quell the riots in the wake of the Rodney King verdict.
So using the military as domestic law enforcement is a really big deal,
especially given how broad and capable state and local law enforcement is. You're basically piling on in a way that might actually render
civilian society a police state.
And I think the president's invocations of the Insurrection Act or potential invocations
of the Insurrection Act in deploying the military to do domestic policing have to be understood
in the context of several administration policies that seem like they are ways to remake the
military into some kind of white nationalist militia. And to use that group, those individuals,
as the domestic police force is pretty terrifying.
So we are putting a pin in this.
It is something we should be watching and aware of.
And if you want to learn more about the Insurrection Act
and the dangers it might pose in reckless hands,
we highly recommend Commander Steve Vladeck's substat,
one first, which on April 14th did a deep dive on these questions.
Speaking of great things we read last week,
what did you read?
Read and saw.
Read and watch and saw.
OK, so I want to first start with the Saturday Night Live
skit, White POTUS.
And before you at me about Amy Lou Wood's teeth, I agree.
It was very mean, asked you Amy Lou Wood's teeth.
But as to everything else, was spot on.
Absolutely fantastic.
So creative.
I mean, absolutely.
Like the part where the Donald Trump character
is wearing a king shirt instead of a Duke shirt.
Chef's kiss, loved it.
John Hamm as RFK Jr, about to literally inject people
with active measles.
Amazing.
Just so good.
Also, the best part was Kristi Noem and Pam Bondi.
And Marco Rubio.
Dissing Marco Rubio.
That was incredible.
I loved it.
The whole thing was so, it was so, I mean,
the Amy Lewood thing.
I love Amy Lewood from Sex Education and like her teeth are beautiful.
She's beautiful.
So yes, I agree.
It was mean to her, but everything else was spot on and fantastic.
Loved it.
The other thing that I love this week is the book Good Dirt by the author,
Shermaine Wilkerson.
She's also the author of Black Cake, which got made into a Hulu mini series.
I love her writing.
I love these sort of multi-generational stories,
and she's an amazing storyteller.
I also started watching season four of Hacks on Max.
Mwah!
I love, love, love Jean Smart and Hannah Isebinder,
and it's so good.
If you haven't seen Hacks, you have to get on this.
And then finally, in the podcast version,
when I'm not listening to Strict Scrutiny and all
of the other fantastic fare in the crooked universe,
I listened to my girl, the other MM, Megan Sussex,
whose new podcast, Confessions of a Female Founder,
just dropped.
And she interviewed one of my law school classmates,
Reshma Sajjani, who's doing all of this great work on how
to make life, society better for working mothers.
And I was like, plus one.
I'm low key jealous of Reshma that she
got to meet my, in my head, best friend, Meghan Markle's,
Les Sussex, but for a good cause.
And it was worth listening to.
OK.
We are also, we initially said we were going to do three.
It is hard to just do three.
So I think we should all grant ourselves permission to shout
out.
Well, the court is doing this nationwide injunction stuff.
I think we get to have a little more,
because you need more good news.
OK, that's great.
I totally agree.
I think it's great you did more than three.
I am also going to do more than three.
So first of all.
I'm not even counting anymore.
So whatever.
Yeah, it's fine.
It's great.
So there is a great piece in The New Yorker last week by
Julia Engwin and Amy Fields-Meyer called So You Want to Be a Dissident that just pulls
together wisdom based on a lot of interviews with foreign dissidents and opposition leaders
and movement strategists and domestic activists and scholars of nonviolent movements and sort
of just calls from all of those conversations and sources, lessons to be learned, quote, from
those who have challenged repressive regimes, a provisional guide for finding courage in
Trump's age of authoritarian fear. So that is a really good read. Last week I mentioned
that I had started, I have to say again because I finished it, Michael Lewis's Who is Government.
I'm sorry, I obviously did a lot of crying this week, but when I tell you I was like
heave crying reading about the head of the National Veterans Cemetery Administration, I am not exaggerating. Here's what I want
to do. I want to clockwork orange style pry open the eyeballs and subject Elon Musk and
Russell Vogt to the stories of the incredible accomplishments and like nobility of some
of these government workers in this book. It is so moving and enraging. So anyway, that's my second recommendation
having finished it. Just Security, based at NYU out of the Reiss Center for Law and Security,
is now on Substack and they have been, I think, keeping the best real-time, like to the nanosecond
running list of litigation against the Trump administration and it is such an indispensable
resource and so I want to mention they are now on Substack. Again, since we started recording
this Fourth Circuit opinion,
and the Abrego Garcia case came down, and when we first talked about it,
I just glanced at it, and I have now, while talking, while podcasting,
read it. And you have to read the seven pages. I'm going to read two
sentences, which is, we yet cling to the hope that it is not naive to
believe our good brethren in the executive branch perceive the rule of
law as vital to the American ethos.
This case presents their unique chance
to vindicate that value and to summon the best
that is within us while there is still time."
So dire and deservedly so, so read that.
And finally, I am reading this Wilkinson novel.
Wait, sorry, can I inject one more Wilkinson line?
Yes.
Since I'm not going to name that independently.
Facilitate
is an active verb.
That's good. Yeah. You get to decide how, but not if, right? You have to do something.
I think that's right. And the last thing I'll mention is a novel I'm reading this week called
Catalina by Carla Cornejo Villa Vicencio, and I'm loving it. So strong recommendation. It's not the novel about the um she's a student. She's an undocumented Harvard student and it's
not it's a novel it's not a memoir it reads like it could be a memoir but it is a novel
and she is a great character and I'm only maybe like 100 pages in but really really enjoying it.
So I did limit myself to three. Well, aren't you?
You're the eighth-grade student, Leah.
Okay.
So after we recorded not this episode, but the previous episode.
Do you want a nationwide injunction for that?
Okay.
Oh, the authority to issue nationwide injunctions.
Much better.
No.
Okay.
So after we recorded not this episode, but the previous episode, it was the first night of Passover and I wanted to highlight Ari Richter's piece, I guess I'll call it Never
Again Will I Visit Auschwitz, a graphic family memoir of trauma and inheritance.
Just poignant, significant.
Can I tell you a weird mind meld thing?
We were going upstate for the weekend and we did a Seder on Saturday night.
And as I was loading up the car and like throwing the matzo meal and stuff like into the car,
I had this graphic novel, Aries Never Again Will I Visit Actu, it's on my bookshelf.
And I was like, we're going to go upstate and do a little Seder and sit by the fire
and I'm going to bring this book up.
And Chris stole it and sat and read the entire thing.
So I didn't get to crack it.
But he also happened to read it last weekend after owning it for quite some time. Also sort of thinking it
would be a good Passover read. So I feel like that is a weird mind melting. But he too was
like, this book is so good. Yeah, it is. I told you, Leah was a work wife. Yeah, but
you're a work wife. I mean, I can have many. We are doing a kind of polygamous thing here with all of our requests.
Indeed.
So second piece wanted to highlight is Michelle Goldberg's piece in the New York Times, the
vibe shifts against the right.
And then finally, not really a piece, but Harvard's new website that they trotted out
that highlighted the many contributions that Harvard gives to the public
and society.
And yes, it focused on scientific research, medical research, and whatnot, but those are
very tangible things to people's lives.
And so of course, I also think humanities, law, other disciplines provide huge public
services as well.
But I just, I love the fight, because I truly think that higher education,
public education, is something worth fighting for.
And if people understood the benefits
that these universities had for communities, for society,
that's the side they would pick.
So can I say something about that?
Because I've been thinking a lot about the assault
on universities and why universities have had so few allies among the public.
And what I basically settled on is, if for the last 10 years
you've kind of made your name on being exclusive,
like not admitting everyone, it's
going to be very hard to find friends when you need them.
And I think one of the things that's great about the Harvard
website is that it makes clear that beyond educating some subset
of the population, Harvard and other universities, whether they are elite Ivy League universities
or land grant universities or whatever, are actually in the public service. They are actually
doing things that benefit the public every day, even if all members of the public do not attend
those universities. And universities that are more accessible in their mission
are going to be part of this shift as well.
It hasn't come for them yet, but it's coming.
And so these universities are obviously
first on the chopping block, and they're standing up.
And that's good, because the larger question is so much
bigger than them.
And it goes to the heart of what it
means to be a public institution in the public service,
even if you are privately owned. OK, before we go, we wanted to remind you all that we are going
on tour. So in case you have not yet grabbed tickets for our Bad Decisions tour, now is the
time to do so. We are almost sold out of our DC show, which is on May 31st at the Capitol Turnaround.
So be sure to get tickets for that.
We are also going to be in New York City at Sony Hall
on June 12 and in Chicago at the Athenaeum Center
on October 4.
Don't miss out.
Head to crooked.com slash events for more information.
Strix Grutiny is a Crooked Media production
hosted and executive produced by Leah Lippmann, Melissa Murray,
and me, Kate Shaw.
Produced and edited by Melody Rowell. Michael Goldsmith is our associate producer.
Audio support from Kyle Seglen and Charlotte Landis. Music by Eddie Cooper. Production
support from Madeleine Herringer, Katie Long, and Ari Schwartz. Matt DeGroote is our head
of production and thanks to our digital team, Ben Hethcote and Joe Matoski. Our production
staff is proudly unionized with the Writers Guild of America East. Subscribe to Strict
Scrutiny on YouTube to catch full episodes.
Find us at youtube.com slash at Strict Scrutiny podcast.
If you haven't already, be sure to subscribe to Strict Scrutiny in your favorite podcast app
so you never miss an episode. And if you want to help other people find the show,
please rate and review us. It really helps.