Strict Scrutiny - Can Trump Mobilize the Military Without California's Consent?
Episode Date: June 16, 2025Melissa, Kate, and Leah can smell the fascism in the air as President Trump forces troops on California protesters. They discuss how he is (yet again) pushing the boundaries of authoritarianism, provi...de an update on the Kilmar Abrego Garcia case, and unpack another flurry of Supreme Court Opinions. Then, they talk trans rights with Chase Strangio, deputy director for transgender justice and staff attorney with the ACLU. Finally, a bit of fun with a game about iconic breakups–political and otherwise. This episode was recorded live from Sony Hall in New York City. Hosts’ favorite things:Kate: “How 2000s Culture Messed Us Up”, (The Culture Study Podcast); “Delay, Interfere, Undermine”, T. Christian Miller and Sebastian Rotella (ProPublica); Federalizing the California National Guard, Steve Vladek (One First)Leah: This Is What Autocracy Looks Like, Michelle Goldberg (NYT); Argent, who dressed the hosts for the showMelissa: What the Hell Is Posse Comitatus Anyway? Elie Mystal (The Nation); The Better Sister (Prime Video); Sarah Sclarandis’ shoes Get tickets for STRICT SCRUTINY LIVE – The Bad Decisions Tour 2025! 10/4 – ChicagoLearn more: http://crooked.com/eventsOrder your copy of Leah's book, Lawless: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad VibesFollow us on Instagram, Threads, and Bluesky
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Strict scrutiny is brought to you by Americans United for a Separation of Church and State.
You don't destroy 250 years of secular democracy without gutting precedent,
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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. Welcome to a very special episode of Strict Scrutiny, your podcast about the Supreme Court
and the legal culture that surrounds it.
And we are coming to you live tonight from Sony Hall in New York City.
This crowd had three choices tonight.
They could have gone to Hamilton.
They could have joined the
Church of Scientology. Or they could have come here and I'm just gonna say what
was the right choice?
We're your hosts. I'm Alyssa Murray. I'm Kate Shaw. And I'm Leah Litman. So as you know, we have a new strict scrutiny summer cocktail, the Big Baller.
We still can't tell you what's in it because state secrets, but it has been another fucking
week and since the Supreme Court has now signed off on Doge getting all of our information without turning over any
of theirs, we've decided, I know boo, we've decided to make these bad boys doubles.
So since the Court is now on board with the big ball agenda, may it displease the Court,
let us introduce the bigger baller. And I just have to say, because we are shallow that
way, we had a great live show in DC and we had an amazing beautiful crowd in DC
but I have to say this New York City crowd is something. Yeah.
In fact, you all look so good and you're having so much fun that I think we might have to
call in the Marines.
Too soon.
Too soon.
The city is going to be filled with seamen.
That's S-E-A men.
The Marines are part of the Department of the Navy.
Get your minds out of the gutter. This isn't the fucking Pentagon.
I've already eaten the frosting off of three Magnolia cupcakes, so I'm raring to go.
That is literally true, and sugar is Leah's secret sauce, so she is really just getting
warmed up.
But I'm going to get us back on track because that is my job.
And here is what we have in store for you tonight.
We are going to start off with the unfolding scene in Los Angeles, where as of Thursday,
there are nearly 5,000 federal troops deployed in an American city.
We're going to talk generally about some of the legal questions raised by the president's domestic use of the military.
This situation is rapidly unfolding, so it is likely that a lot of additional things
will have happened before this episode airs on Monday and also possibly before we are
even off this stage.
But we're going to press on.
After that, we will talk about some of the additional goings on at SCOTUS, including
the opinions that we got last week.
And we're also going to be joined by a very special guest, friend of the pod and Supreme
Court litigator extraordinaire, Chase Strangio is here in the house tonight. And after we break down this court with Chase,
because it's a live show, we are going
to play a little strict scrutiny game.
And you know this is a podcast that
runs the gamut from the Federalist Papers
to Vanderpump Rules.
So that's what this game is going to do.
So if you're a con law nerd or a pop culture nerd,
this is your moment because everyone needs to get on this pub night trivia.
All right, let's dive in.
We're going to start off tonight with the Trump administration's extraordinary and
extraordinarily dangerous decision to implement
its mass deportation agenda in the great state of California.
In California, as we know, they have launched massive ICE raids, ICE raids that were allegedly
orchestrated by Stephen Miller.
Boo.
So after the massive large scale ICE raids began around June 4th in LA, Angelenos began
protesting.
Most of the protests were peaceful,
although a handful were not.
Some driverless cars were vandalized,
there was other scattered property damage,
as we should say oftentimes happens at large mass protests,
and never before did anyone think
that a few protesters were so scary,
they required a full-scale military deployment.
Until now. Until the very scared administration of manly men, Donald Trump
and Stephen Miller. I think they really need to take a look at Josh Hawley's
manhood. The masculine virtues that America needs. Get your minds out of the
gutter. Again, this is not the Pentagon.
On Saturday, June 6th, President Trump
signed an executive order that generally referenced, quote,
incidents of violence and disorder,
but actually didn't say anything about LA specifically,
which I think means New York, Philly, Chicago, and elsewhere,
we are all on notice.
So that executive order relied on a federal statute,
10 USC section 12406, that allows members
of the National Guard to be, quote,
called into federal service, that is, federalized.
And the executive order said they would be used to, quote,
temporarily protect ICE and other US government personnel
who are performing federal functions.
So after the executive order,
the Secretary of Defense, yep,
then implemented the directive by federalizing
around 4,000 members of the California National Guard
and then sent in 700 Marines.
So again, this is how we get to nearly 5,000
military personnel members in Los Angeles.
As Leah said in our last show,
Article II, Fascist II, Furious, that is where we are. members in Los Angeles. As Leah said in our last show, article two fascist, two
furious. That is where we are. Or as this fine denizen of Los Angeles said after
being tear gassed, but you told me you got caught up in the tear gas as well.
Describe what happened to you. Oh just tasted a little teary-eyed.
Tasted like fascism.
Just for context, the last time that the President of the United States deployed the National
Guard to Los Angeles was in response to the 1992 Rodney King riots.
But importantly, in that case, California's Governor Pete Wilson actually requested the
presence of the National Guard.
And in fact, that is typically how this works.
In fact, the only times to our knowledge that the President has deployed the National Guard
without first seeking the approval of a state's governor is when President Eisenhower deployed
the Arkansas National Guard
alongside federal troops to integrate Central High School in Little Rock and
when President Lyndon Johnson sent troops to protect civil rights marchers
in Selma, Alabama. So I think the real question that we have to ask here is how
much time will it take for this administration to start claiming that
what they are doing in Los Angeles is about protecting civil rights?
You are manifesting a true social post real hard right now.
It's inevitable.
Yeah, I know.
Okay.
So both Eisenhower and LBJ relied when they federalized the National Guard on the Insurrection
Act, right?
This different statute to deploy troops to Act, right, this different statute
to deploy troops to protect, again,
ordinary people pursuing civil rights.
Real civil rights.
Real civil rights, the literal opposite scenario of today.
So according to California's complaint in the case
that is now challenging the administration's actions
in Los Angeles, the only time that this statute
that is currently being relied upon, 12406, by itself has
ever been used to justify federal military force was when Richard Nixon used it to authorize the
National Guard to help with mail delivery because of a major postal strike. Again, nothing like the
present. But these guys do love Dick. Nixon. So section 12406.
How many cupcakes did you have?
Just three and just the frosting.
So, you know, actually, I did have some pudding as well.
Banana pudding. So extra sugar.
OK. But the statute 12406 is usually the vehicle for federalizing the National Guard
in service of the Insurrection Act.
Here the Trump administration
has consciously decoupled them.
At least for the moment, right?
So we should pause to explain the relevance
of the Insurrection Act.
So there's another key federal law,
the Posse Comitatus Act,
which prohibits federal military forces
from engaging in ordinary law enforcement,
except under specific exceptions when authorized by Congress.
And the Insurrection Act, which is really acts,
is one such exception.
So when it is invoked, it allows the federal military
to enforce existing federal laws.
It is a very big deal to unleash the federal military
to enforce federal law, which is what the Insurrection Act allows, right?
Most military personnel are not trained to do this kind of civilian law enforcement.
They aren't trained to deal with civil unrest or engage in de-escalation. They are trained to defeat an enemy.
So Kate's right, you know Trump has employed the military to respond to political protests, but on the other hand,
employed the military to respond to political protests but on the other hand there are now no more black little mermaids and you can use homophobic
slurs and you can deny women health care so who wouldn't take that deal right
yes wrong oh okay anyways without invoking the insurrection act all the
military is supposed to do right now is
to protect federal personnel like ICE officers as those federal officials themselves enforce
federal law because the big manly men at ICE and DHS need some protection from the dancing
Angelinos.
And again, for context, it's really important to note here that the
last time someone tried to stop a throng of people joyfully dancing in order to
advance a Christian theocratic agenda was in 1984 in Footloose. And that is
obviously very different from the circumstances here, in large part because everyone in Footloose
was actually hot.
Also, for some reason, the specter
of a bunch of very insecure men calling up the military
to feel big and strong reminds me of the scene
in Arrested Development where Buster Bluth,
wearing a stripper's army costume,
is holding a bunch of beanie baby like stuffed animals
and says, these are my medals, mother, from army.
And I pulled that clip when Leah mentioned it.
He's like, he holds up a stuffed seal
and says the seal is for marksmanship
and the gorilla is for sand racing.
But you know, more seriously back to what these guard members are supposed to be doing, it is obviously very difficult to police the line between enforcing the law and protecting the personnel
who are enforcing the law.
And along these lines, some reporting has already suggested that some federal military
officials may be helping ICE carry out arrests and detaining some people until ICE arrives to make arrests.
So we may be inching much closer to the invocation of the Insurrection Act and actual law enforcement
than has officially even occurred.
But those aren't arrests, arrests.
They're just like a vibe.
Right, right.
Okay, so it's fine.
Yes.
Arrest-ish.
Arrest-adjacent.
Right.
Yeah.
But I mean, just, but that obviously does. It reveals the way that federalizing the National Guard and deploying the military is allowing Trump to push the boundaries of authority, edging closer to invoking the act and again, having the military enforce federal law in an American city. at this point that California is not taking this lying down and in fact
California's governor yes let's give it up for California
California's governor Gavin Musum we call him Gavin with the good hair and
the bad podcast they're bad guests I'd actually don't know is it a bad podcast
yes bad guess okay right yes the bad part you all know the guests make the They're bad guests. I actually don't know. Is it a bad podcast? Yes.
It's a bad guest.
Okay, right.
Yes, a bad podcast.
We all know the guests make the podcast.
That is true.
So Gavin Newsom, Gavin with the good hair, has filed a lawsuit challenging the lawfulness
of the administration's actions.
And specifically, California is arguing that Section 12046 specifies that when the president
calls members of the State National Guard into federal
service those orders quote shall be issued through the governors of the states and California
argues that that means that the statute contemplates some kind of consultation between the president
of the United States and the governor of the implicated state in question and that's
because of reading right and textualism and that is something that according to
California did not happen here. So on Wednesday June 11th the Department of
Justice filed its response and predictably they fucked it up. So the table of contents just said table of contents.
There was no actual content described.
This seems like a metaphor.
And the table of authorities,
which is lawyers speak for a bibliography of laws
and cases that support your argument,
basically just said table of authorities.
They didn't list any supporting sources,
no actual authority supporting them, also quite Freudian.
It was mortifying for them,
which of course made it awesome for us.
They did include some actual pages of written argument,
which claimed in essence that section 12406's,
quote, through the governor
language just means the president has to use the governor like as a pass through, right?
Like a message conveyor that the statute-
Or an ATM.
Yeah, that works too.
But essentially, right, the statute doesn't require any substantive assent or approval,
right?
Like you put your request in, the National Guard comes out, no substantive role for you.
So that's a theory. An ATM, a rubber stamp, because federalism, right?
Yeah. So they're saying the statute doesn't actually contemplate the
governor's involvement, even though it literally says, quote, shall be issued
through the governors of the state, end quote. They are forgoing textualism for texting,
or maybe accidentally adding Gavin with the good hair
to their signal chats.
Once again, Pamela Jo Bondi's DOJ is showing us
that reading is what?
Not fundamental.
They can't read.
So, yeah.
So a hearing on this question was actually held on
Thursday June 12th in the Northern District of California before District
Judge Charles Breyer. That is the other Breyer. Judge Breyer is the younger
brother of retired Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer. You didn't know that? I
know. So we are, we are quite possibly expecting a ruling maybe during this live show,
more likely right after because Article 3 loves to fuck with the pod.
Based on reporting, it does seem like Judge Breyer may rule that the administration's
federalization of the National Guard was illegal.
So at one point during the hearing,
he remarked, quote, that's the difference
between a constitutional government and King George.
It's not just that the president can say something
and anything goes, end quote.
It's like he knew we were recording this episode live
from a venue across the street from Hamilton.
We see you. We see you, Judge Breyer. Yeah. Yeah. So DOJ's argument is that the president
has the constitutional authority to federalize the military, which would mean he doesn't
even need Congress's permission to do so, they also maintained courts owe complete deference
to the president's determination to call up the guard.
So Judge Breyer summarized DOJ's position this way,
quote, if the president says that there's a rebellion,
then there is a rebellion, end quote.
Even if the rebellion is more of a vibe.
But Judge Breyer continued, quote,
how is that different from what a monarch is?
Which totally reminds me of,
I will send a fully armed battalion
to remind you of my love.
This is Melissa's Broadway debut
and she is making the most of it.
As Jonathan Goff, as King George said,
I'll be back and you'll be sorry.
Okay, but Judge Breyer is asking the real questions here.
What is the difference between a president deploying the military troops to affect law
enforcement in a domestic context and a monarch doing the same thing?
That is the essential question and
waiting with bated breath for his answer.
Yeah, and I think we are likely to get a ruling again as Leah said today.
He suggested he was likely to try to get it done today, so potentially tonight. And
the prospect of a ruling potentially against the administration makes all the more relevant some statements by one Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, which is a phrase we still cannot believe
we have to say, but we do, at a hearing in the Senate on Wednesday. So Hegseth, who in
the immortal words of Melissa Murray, is the Brett Kavanaugh of Dan Bongino's of the Trump
2.0 cabinet.
Okay, I actually, no, no.
Oh, sorry, did I misquote you? You you're not gonna throw me under the bus again,
like you did at the Senate, like where you were like.
I did not say that.
I did not say you said it.
I said that Brett Kavanaugh was the Dan Bongino
of Pete Hegseth.
That's right, that's true, that's true, I've garbled it.
Okay, well, so if Kennedy asked me that question,
I'm gonna be sure to get it right next time. So but this aforementioned Pete Hegseth in response
to a substantive question declined to say whether the administration would
obey court orders telling the federal military to stand down. He basically just
deflected. He stated quote what I can say is we should not have local judges
determining foreign policy or national security policy for the country, right?
Which was alarming on Wednesday and in light of the possibility of an actual
ruling materializing is all the more alarming. So let's maybe do a lightning
round on some assorted thoughts. Yeah. How bad is this? Well, so I think this feels like the administration relitigating and reliving what they wanted
to do with the BLM protesters in the summer of 2020, unleash violence and military force
against the Black Lives Matter protesters.
And they are also trying to normalize these emergencies, quote, emergencies that warrant
assertions of extraordinary power.
You know, apparently LA slash California slash
the entire country is in rebellion or on the precipice
of one which purportedly requires military presence.
Our trade deficits are an emergency requiring
unprecedented tariffs.
The fentanyl situation is too.
The presence of students in the United States
is a grave and dangerous threat to United States
foreign policy so they have to be kidnapped out the streets.
Because of all the reading.
All the reading.
And then we, the United States, are under some kind of invasion by Trende Aragwa, which
requires us to say like a Jew process.
But the Heg-Seth statement is illuminating because when he says it's not for judges to
determine national security policy for the country, They are framing everything as national security policy.
So they are arguing everything they are doing
is above the law and not subject to checks.
And little wannabe fascist tyrants everywhere
are trying to do the same thing.
So the Missouri governor declared an emergency
to mobilize a state guard in response to possible protests.
And this is how it happens.
I'm just gonna say none of this is surprising.
If you're surprised, then you just tuned into this pot
because we've been saying this for forever.
In Trump 1.0, the Brennan Center's Liza Gautian
basically had a cottage industry in basically studying
all of the different emergency statutes
that could authorize the president to act
and to do these sorts of things
without any kind of legal checks.
And the only thing that really surprises me right now
is how it took them this long to get to this point, right?
I mean, it's June.
I expected them to do this in February.
So I guess that's restraint, like conservative values, good I guess.
I also wanna give a shout out.
The California Attorney General's comms office
is doing an absolutely amazing job.
So California released a press release about its lawsuit
against the Trump administration over this issue,
and it had a great explainer on California's arguments,
explaining everything that California was putting forth
at the court.
But then it had this CVS style receipt where,
the section is titled, What They Were Saying,
which is like, just read that in your Joan Collins voice,
what they were saying. And they literally have clips and tweets of people like former South
Dakota governor Kristi Noem saying things like South Dakota would never do
anything to violate states rights and sending in the National Guard without the assent of
South Dakota's governor, her, would violate states' rights.
Hmm.
Very, very interesting.
But South Dakota and California are fundamentally different, Melissa.
That's what you're failing to grasp.
Well, it's also only Democratic presidents need to seek consent from Republican governors,
but the opposite isn't true.
Yes, that's the principle.
Article two.
Yes, that's right principle. Article two. Yes, that's right.
It's true.
So as we record this episode, we're
sort of on the precipice of a pretty surreal split frame
that we're expecting on Saturday.
So first, we have Trump's military parade
slash birthday party.
Boo.
Yes.
Rudely, that is also Melody's birthday.
Melody wants you to know, yes, you can cheer for that, not for Trump, but for Melody.
Melody wants you to know if you're looking to celebrate either her birthday or Trump's,
you can donate to the Missouri Abortion Fund.
But I'm not wishing this on Melody's birthday, but as of Thursday, there were rumblings that
thunderstorms might end up requiring the cancellation of the birthday parade, which I mean...
Let the heavens open!
Like possible divine intervention.
But we also have scheduled, in terms of this split frame the No Kings
protest planned all over the country on Saturday. The last big round of nationwide
protests, the hands-off protests in early April were actually pretty remarkable
including in very small towns, in very red states, and big cities like New York.
And Trump has said some pretty ominous things
about this convergence.
So let's roll that tape.
We're going to be celebrating big on Saturday.
We're going to have a lot of —
and if there's any protest that wants to come out,
they will be met with very big force.
By the way, for those people that want to protest,
they're going to be met with very big force.
And I haven't even heard about a protest.
But, you know, this is people that hate our country.
But they will be met with very heavy force.
Very heavy force, if you missed it.
That's just locker room talk.
It's just the way boys talk.
It also reflects a very well-known exception
to the First Amendment for emotionally
needy, insecure men who need to throw themselves
military parades.
Yes.
Yeah.
The First Amendment also notably does not apply on June 14th, which is Flag Day, since
that is the Alito's favorite holiday and also their least favorite amendment, at least when it's being exercised by people who aren't
Republican.
I'd forgotten about that.
Melissa, vergonia!
Vergonia on you!
So much has happened.
Never forget the freak flags flying.
All right, that is truly Martha Anna Raysher true. Okay so just because the heavens are
going to open doesn't mean some people aren't going to let their freak flags fly. Some Trump
officials have already started celebrating the president's birthday a little bit early. So on
Thursday, Secretary of Homeland Security, Crispy
Noem, held a press conference and she described the occupation slash
invasion's mission in the following terms. We are not going away. We are staying
here to liberate the city from the socialist and the burdensome leadership
that this governor and that this mayor
have placed on this country and what they have tried to insert into the city.
They are liberating LA the same way Vladimir Putin is liberating Ukraine. She just comes out and says they are subjecting a major city to military occupation for politics
because they disagree with the city and governor's politics.
And unsurprisingly, California's elected leaders, including California's Senator Alex Padilla, had some questions which he
tried to ask the secretary at the presser. And this was such a grave offense
that the administration manhandled the senator and forced him out of the room.
He was thrown to the ground and put in handcuffs. These goons assaulted a duly elected senator. They are lopping a military dictatorship
because free speech is so free, they are trying to free themselves of having to answer for
their occupation of California. Like they are trying to make it a crime to oppose dear
leader and his policies.
It is nakedly authoritarian conduct.
And thus far, their defense seems basically
to be that Senator Padilla was asking for it,
that he hadn't identified himself as a senator.
As if first that would make the assault OK
if he was, say, a journalist asking the question.
But also, there is video in which Padilla very clearly
identifies himself as a senator. I don't think there's any question that they
were on notice that he is a senator. And along these lines we should note they
are not just detaining, handcuffing, and throwing to the ground opposition
politicians. Representative LaMonica McIver was indicted on three charges
related to her exercise of her constitutional oversight
authority and the resulting clashes outside of an ICE
detention center in Newark, New Jersey.
None of this is normal.
Arresting and charging opposition political leaders
for speech and oversight is authoritarian conduct full stop.
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Okay.
Next up, we would like to briefly cover some of the developments involving Kilmar Abrego-Garcia and the ongoing litigation about the scope and substance
of the Alien Enemies Act.
Now, listeners, you may recall that midway
through recording our last episode,
ABC News broke the story that Abrego-Garcia
was on a plane bound for the United States
where he was going to be charged with various offenses related
to the transporting of undocumented migrants.
And we were processing that in real time. And as we noted in that last episode, it was a very big deal
that Abrego Garcia was returned to the United States.
I think that our view is that Abrego Garcia's case has been an enormous stress test for courts and for the rule of law, right? Like the news cycle can move really fast
and it doesn't help that there is an ever fresh supply
of executive branch conduct
that is genuinely shocking and appalling.
But in this case, I really think that a concerted effort
to maintain public attention on his case
and pressure on the administration mattered.
So recall administration officials,
including DHS secretary Noam, Attorney General Pamela Jo Bondi insisted that he would not ever
return to the United States.
Brego Garcia is a citizen of El Salvador and
should never have been in this country and will not be coming back to this
country. There is no scenario where Brego Garcia will be in the United States
again.
If he were to come back, we would immediately deport him again because he is a terrorist,
he's a human smuggler, and he is a wife beater.
He is not coming back to our country. President Bukele said he was not sending him back. That's
the end of the story. If he wanted to send him back, we would give him a plane ride back.
There was no situation ever where he was going
to stay in this country, none, none.
He would have come back, had one extra step of paperwork,
and gone back again.
But he's from El Salvador, he's in El Salvador,
and that's where the president plans on keeping him.
So shouty.
She should try smiling more.
But despite the shouts, the unsmiling shouts, he returned, right? And an important takeaway here is pressure works.
And not just pressure from the public, although I think the fact that so many people were
engaged with the story, but I have been railing about this thing we call a Congress, so I'm just
going to give credit where credit is due. I think it was really meaningful here that
the Maryland Congressional delegation took themselves to El Salvador, and I think it
really made a difference. And so again, Congress, more of this. And if you don't want to go
to El Salvador, you can just show up to Senate Judiciary Committee hearings
on Trump nominees and ask them questions,
and that would be good too.
Speaking of showing up, we are a Supreme Court podcast,
so let's get to that business.
I've forgotten about them too.
We would all like to, but regrettably, we can't.
So OK, first, a week ago,
the Supreme Court actually issued,
it had its weird glitch.
It issued its Monday orders list three days early,
which is last Friday,
blaming an apparent software malfunction
that caused email notifications to go out early,
which didn't instill a ton of confidence
in how things are going over there.
Remember that time when there was a leak of an opinion
back in 2022 and the Chief Justice
says we are conducting a technology audit?
So you know I think they did.
They did do that audit.
It was just that the audit was a reenactment of that scene from Zoolander where they're
bashing the computers.
Only here it's Brett Kavanaugh grunting like a monkey hopping around with a computer with
Neil Gorsuch by his side.
Anyways, so we got some opinions from the court but none of the big ones. We got six opinions on
Thursday, four unanimous, two with Gorsuch's dissents, though some significant concurrences.
I think we'll just do two of them though. Yeah. Yeah, right. So let's start with AJT versus
Aseo Area School Districts, a case about what legal standard courts should use when reviewing a challenge
to a school's failure to offer reasonable accommodations
to students with disabilities.
And in particular, when the challenge is brought under a statute,
the Americans with Disabilities Act, or ADA, and Section 504
of another statute, the Rehab Act.
This is actually an open question, because typically challenges
to schools' failures
to provide reasonable accommodations
proceed under another federal statute, the IDEA,
rather than the ADA or the Rehab Act.
So the court granted cert in this case
to decide whether a uniquely demanding standard should
apply in the context of ADA and Rehab Act claims
that involve students.
So let me put this differently.
The standard would require students claiming a failure
to accommodate their disability to show first
that the school acted with bad faith or gross misjudgment
rather than just some deliberate indifference
to the accommodation.
So a much higher standard for the students to make.
And listeners, you'll recall that the way
the petitioners framed the question presented
really triggered counsel for the respondent,
long time Supreme Court advocate Lisa Blatt,
who was defending the decision below in the school district.
As she stressed at oral argument, she did not think
the courts or her client were advocating a standard
unique to the educational context, and she maintained that anyone who suggested otherwise was
a big fat liar leading to these exchanges. What the school district has
said which is what Monahan said is that Mr. Martinez and the Solicitor General
are lying. It's an oral argument yes absolutely it is not true that we should
be more careful with your words.
OK, well, they should be more careful in mischaracterizing
a position.
Ms. Blatt, I confess I'm still troubled by your suggestion
that your friends on the other side have lied.
OK, let's help pull it out.
I think we're going to have to here.
And I'd ask you to reconsider that phrase.
An oral argument.
If I might.
It was incorrect. If I might.
It was incorrect.
If I, incorrect is fine.
Oh, lying.
People make mistakes.
Okay.
You can accuse people of being incorrect, but lying, Ms. Blatt, if I might finish.
Sure.
Lying is another matter.
One can interpret those perhaps different ways, but surely a reasonable person could
interpret them as arguing for a special rule in the educational context, correct?
No, only because of the tech.
Ms. Blatt.
Okay, well, you and I mean...
A reasonable person. All of those emphasize the unique context of primary and secondary education and the need for a special rule, don't they?
Fine, but what I'm objecting to...
Fine, fine.
Then would you withdraw your accusation?
I'll withdraw it. Thank you.
That's it.
OK.
Why does she have me rooting for Neil Gorsuch?
I just want to say, if at any point in our interactions
with each other I say to you, OK, that's fine,
please understand that it is actually not fine at all and I am
gonna go back to my desk and I'm gonna take out my Arya Stark burn book and I'm
gonna write your name in it. It's not fine at all. No one wants that. No. So okay in
this case in an opinion by the Chief Justice the Supreme Court unanimously
rejected Blatt's position the idea that students had to show bad faith
or gross misjudgment in bringing accommodation claims
under the ADA and the Rehab Act.
It's a position she said she wasn't taking
at the oral argument, but it was a nine-oh ruling
against her client.
And that's the good news.
But.
But, okay, now is the time in the show
where we have to have our reoccurring segment we need to
talk about Justice Thomas's concurrence okay all right or are you clapping
for that these are never good this is never a good segment so we are
workshopping you know we have the cab currents for Justice Kavanaugh so we're
workshopping some names for the JusticeV currents for Justice Kavanaugh, so we're workshopping some names
for the Justice Thomas concurrences.
So there is the Clarence currents, a little wobbly.
A Claire currents, possibility.
The Con Clarence, possibility too.
Think you all are thinking of other things.
Okay, but we're workshopping it and our DMs are open
to your suggestions, so please send those in.
Anyway, back to our originally scheduled programming,
Justice Thomas suggested in this concurrence
the court had not, quote,
resolved what all plaintiffs are actually required to show
under the ADA and Rehab Act.
And I think we should take that as an invitation
for more litigation.
Also, he just threw out that, like, by the way, the spending clause might be unconstitutional.
No, really, like, he suggests there is a constitutional problem with the way courts are applying Title
II of the ADA.
And as is typical in, I think I like Conclarence.
I think that's my pick for now.
But we had some applause.
I think others also
like that one.
You get two applause.
Okay, okay. That's...
All right.
More than two, Melissa. Thank you.
He would have gone further, of course, than the majority. So he explained, quote, the
district contends that Title II, which targets state and local governments, cannot be read
to compel states to expend state funds to accommodate people with disabilities in accordance with federal
standards seems like maybe a pretty scary invitation to reconsider the ADA
more generally and this was especially alarming because it was not a typical
solo Clarence Currence I guess I'll try another one I still like Con Clarence
better but um he was joined so it wasn just him, he was joined by the court's other great concurrer,
Justice Kavanaugh,
the author of many riveting cavcurrences.
Good, yes, boo his.
Okay, we call them cavcurrences,
they could also be Buzzfeed listicles.
Yeah.
But these two nasty boys say that the ADA
might violate the spending clause because the courts are
not requiring plaintiffs to show intentional discrimination, to prevail on their ADA claims.
But requiring plaintiffs to show intentional discrimination under Title II of the ADA would
eviscerate reasonable accommodation claims. And Justice Sotomayor, who is joined in her concurrence
by Justice Jackson, explained why the nasty boys are dead
wrong about this.
Hat tip to Elena Kagan.
As Justice Sotomayor wrote, quote,
persons with disabilities can, of course,
lose access to benefits and services
by reason of or because of their disabilities absent any
invidious animus or purpose.
Stairs may prevent a wheelchair-bound person from accessing a public place. Exactly. This is not
hard, right? There are lots of ways in which people don't intend to discriminate, but the
practicalities is that some people will be excluded from a space. So why are you trying to change this, to require intentional discrimination unless you actually
want to undermine the prospect of civil rights?
No, no, no, no, no.
It's because civil rights, because they're enforcing civil rights.
Right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Of the people building stairs.
Yes, exactly.
Yes.
Justice for stair builders.
Yes.
Exactly.
Yeah. Okay. Kavanaugh could get behind that.
Oh, yeah.
He wants to build.
He is a builder.
That's right.
OK.
So the other case we're going to talk about
is Martin versus United States, a case about whether and how
you can sue federal officials when, as here, an FBI SWAT
team mistakenly raids your house and roughs you up
and destroys your property because a GPS device took them to the wrong house on the wrong street, not even the same
number as the right house on a different street.
And all of the particulars are a little murky because the official threw away the allegedly
malfunctioning personal GPS device, as you do.
But that's basically what happened.
Yeah.
So the law here is super complex.
So the first thing to know is the background principle
that the government is generally immune from suit.
That's called sovereign immunity,
and it's kind of sketchy, but that's for another day.
A federal law called the Federal Tort Claims Act,
or the FTCA, waives the government's immunity.
So you can sue the government in certain circumstances, but that law also contains a lot of exceptions, meaning
circumstances where the government continues to be immune. However, those
exceptions also have exceptions, including a proviso that
removes that preserved immunity in circumstances involving law enforcement
officials. Got it? It's fine.
Neither do any of the Supreme Court justices,
or at least the boys.
So yeah.
Basically, everyone in this room is prepared
to decide this case right now.
Yeah.
Um.
Woo!
The particular provision that's at issue here
is the law enforcement proviso that
allows the government to be sued in circumstances involving
certain kinds of law enforcement officials. And and the court in an opinion authored by
Justice Gorsuch clarified that the law enforcement proviso only overrides the government's sovereign immunity in cases of
Intentional torts which is one of the statutes exceptions that allows the government to retain its immunity if you're confused now, so are they?
The law enforcement proviso however does not override any of the other exceptions. So there's that.
So to translate a little bit, the reasoning so far actually kind of
restricts plaintiffs' ability to proceed in these suits against the government,
but the court also held that the United States does not have a free-floating
supremacy clause defense that allows the federal
government to prevail whenever officers can plausibly claim they were pursuing a federal
policy.
And that's something the 11th Circuit had found below.
So here the court reversed the 11th Circuit, but left to that court the application of
this new opinion, and Assoda Mayor and Jackson concurrence made clear that they definitely
think these claims should be allowed to proceed.
And I think they have a better chance of proceeding now, but that all remains to be seen below.
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episode. All right.
One of the best things about live shows is that we get to be joined by our friends and
the guests make the podcast, in the words of Melissa Murray.
So we get to be joined by our friends in real life.
It is actually quite rare that even the three of us get to be in the same place in real life and it is even more rare that we get to hang out with one of our BFFs of the pod.
New York, that's quite a windup from Kate, but I think you know what's going to happen
now.
We're going to be joined by, again, a friend of the pod and a friend of civil rights more
generally.
Real civil rights.
Real civil rights more generally. Please. Real civil rights. Real civil rights. Please join us in welcoming to the stage
the extraordinary Chase Strangio.
If you're unfamiliar with Chase, then you've
been listening to Gavin Newsom's podcast, and we know. But for those of you who unfamiliar with Chase, then you've been listening to Gavin Newsom's podcast,
and we know.
But for those of you who are long-time listeners, I know I don't need to say this, but I will
say it anyway.
Chase is the Deputy Director for Transgender Justice and a staff attorney with the American
Civil Liberties Union, and he also argued on behalf of parents of trans minors
in the recent case, probably the blockbuster case
of the term United States versus Skirmetty.
So Chase, welcome back.
We are so glad to have you.
Thank you.
I was really glad that there was a visual of how
to hold a microphone back there.
So that was.
They were like, don't eat it.
Don't eat it. Don't eat it. Yeah, don't eat it.
You're doing great.
Don't eat it.
But now I'm almost self-conscious about it.
Could it get too close?
Yeah.
But yeah, I got it.
Okay, we're ready.
Okay, so there is so much happening.
We wanted to talk to you about some of the dynamics
we've observed in the political and legal conversations
over trans rights.
And one thing we have noticed is the recent hesitation or unwillingness to defend trans rights in certain
corners which maybe is related to some efforts to blame the results of the 2024 election on trans
people. I guess Trace like what do you make or, is there a retrenchment and is this, you know, part of the process of social movements, progress, pushback, retrenchment, moving forward or what are we seeing?
Have you two been listening to Gavin Newsom's podcast?
I don't even hate listen to that thing, but I like that orientation that this is part of the process that we
will sort of inevitably move forward and I like to believe that that's true. I
think if that is the cycle we are in the retrenchment it's impossible to suggest
otherwise and for trans people in particular it's a catastrophic
retrenchment because we are being positioned as the fall guys, so to speak, for everything
in just the classic scapegoating where a group of people
that represents less than 1% of the population
is being blamed for societal problems
and sort of endemic challenges
and all of a sudden it's trans people's fault.
Yeah, right, like because a trans woman competed in swimming,
the price of eggs went up, right?
That's how the economy works.
And now it's like darts, you know?
So, yeah.
Great.
Let's talk about the Skirmetti case in particular.
There's been a lot of sort of, I guess,
Monday morning quarterbacking on this about why the case was
brought, should the case have been brought.
What do you make of both critics outside of the movement
and within progressive circles who are fly-specking or questioning the
strategies around how rights advances are made or brought to the courts?
Yeah, I mean this is something that is, it's so difficult to comprehend in a
certain way because if you think about the health care bans for trans adolescents these started in 2021 very recently this is
medical care that people were receiving with the consent of their parents the
recommendation of their doctors for decades in the United States they were
relying on this care and then you go from zero states banning this care to
half the country banning the care in a period of three years, and families are in absolute catastrophic circumstances,
kids are losing their healthcare.
When the ACLU filed the first case in 2021,
everyone thought this is a winning case.
The governor of Arkansas vetoed the bill.
Asa Hutchinson said, this is vast government overreach.
We are-
Liberal squish, noted liberal squish.
I mean Asa Hutchinson loves trans people as we all know.
And he too thought this was a bridge too far
and that was the context in which we brought these cases
into federal court.
Republican governors vetoing the laws,
kids losing healthcare,
overriding the decisions of parents.
In the middle of the pandemic,
when the states that were passing these laws were also like,
oh, by the way, you can definitely try ivermectin,
even though we know it doesn't work.
And so that was-
And bleach.
And bleach.
And yeah, and we have to be able to not send our kids
to school en masse because of parental rights.
And so that, there was this robust discourse
of parental rights.
These were states that the Republican governors even
thought they were going too far.
And there was such a catastrophic harm.
And so everyone was in support of bringing these cases
into federal court.
And when you bring a series of civil rights cases
into federal court and a circuit split emerges,
you cannot control whether the Supreme Court is
going to hear a case concerning your
civil rights. And I think this is really important. The other thing is there's all sorts of people
saying, well, you should have gone to state court, which first of all, yes, maybe we could
have gone to state court in Alabama and it would have been incredibly unsuccessful. And
also state court, state Supreme Court decisions
are also reviewed by the Supreme Court.
And so you cannot say, in essence what people are saying
is trans people should have waited and died,
and then you can, in a few generations,
if there's any of you left, vindicate your civil rights.
Yeah, and I guess part of the context
for bringing these cases at that time is also,
this is also happening in the wake of DAbs when state referenda right that are protecting
Individuals access to health care and individual civil rights are succeeding
So it's within the context of that movement as well
And so so that's like it's amazing that we're only talking about four years ago and the dynamics have so radically changed
So so maybe I'll ask a two-part question
One is, how are you thinking right now
about kind of courts in this moment,
not just the litigation, much of which has been ongoing
for some time, but new challenges,
if they need to be brought.
And again, we don't wanna ask you too much
about a case that is currently pending,
but if you wanna talk with any more specificity
about Scrumetti itself and the dynamics around bringing
that case when you did?
We would love to hear those.
Yeah, I mean, I think for, I mean, how do I think of courts?
In some sense, I think of course,
the way that I've always thought of courts,
which is this is a limited harm reduction tool
that we have to keep utilizing
because we can get temporary relief in contexts
where the harms are so great
that even the temporary relief is transformative.
And so to me it's always a harm reduction.
We're not getting liberation through the courts
and there's lots of reasons to be concerned,
but we are bringing cases in state and federal court
every single day at the ACLU and we will continue to do so.
So that's, I would say, point one.
And then with Scrimetti, I guess I would just, you know, point one. And then, you know, with Scrimmety,
I guess I would just say two things.
And again, coming back to the harm,
I have been working on trans litigation for 15 years.
I've been working on behalf of LGBTQ people
for over 20 years.
And I've never felt so devastated and despairing as I did
between 2021 and 2023,
watching people lose access to their lifeline.
And it just felt like we were gonna fight
as much as we had to fight.
And the Sixth Circuit decision that we sought cert from
was so terrible and so intellectually dishonest
and so harmful, not just for the Sixth Circuit,
but for the three other circuits that followed it
and for the people whose lives were impacted by it.
And so we fight to get a less bad or a good decision.
You never know.
And so I think that's what it feels like
with respect to Scrametti.
But I'm thinking it's June in 1986, the Supreme Court
upheld criminal bans on sodomy for same-sex couples.
And that was seen as obviously catastrophic for LGBT movement
work, for gay people generally.
And it's not like the movement was like, oh, well, we lost.
We're going to give up.
Whatever happens, we're not going to give up.
We're going to keep fighting. And they, we're not going to give up. We're going to keep fighting.
And they overturned Bauer 17 years later in Lawrence.
Yeah.
So I wanted to say something else about the decision
that the Supreme Court is reviewing in Skirmetty.
Because when you talk about how catastrophic it was
and bankrupt it was, one of the remarkable things about that opinion
is the court in explaining why laws that targeted
trans people don't trigger heightened scrutiny
focused on this weird idea that actually trans people
are not minorities in need of judicial protection, but the real
people, right, who were subject to attack were somehow political officials who were
attacking trans kids because the court noted, look, look at all the briefs in
this case. Who are nonprofit organizations and medical organizations supporting?
The trans kids, not the state.
As if that somehow proved that trans people
didn't need the protection of the state
because reasons and when the reality is,
those briefs just underscored
that there is no case for these healthcare
bans right like that's why the medical organizations are supporting the plaintiffs.
Yeah, I mean, I will say I remember I just wrote the opinion for you chief.
Yeah, just I mean, it's done.
Right.
I in the appeal of the first preliminary injunction in the Arkansas case, the Attorney General's
office got up before the East Circuit and the first point injunction in the Arkansas case, the attorney general's office
got up before the eighth circuit
and the first point they argued was that trans people
have a huge amount of political power.
The other side is really obsessed with zeroing in on it.
Couldn't you have done something
about the 2024 election then?
Yeah, no, no.
I thought Justice Sotomayor addressed this
very effectively in oral arguments,
noting that this is not a situation where this group,
which is about 1% of the population,
is going to be able to harness the political process
to affect the kinds of returns that they want.
And I also note, this whole question
of who exercises political power is not an idle question.
This goes to the very heart of what it means
to be classified as a minority
for purposes of equal protection. So if you
look at the Dobbs opinion, Justice Alito talks about how women are not lacking
electoral and political power. That's not, you know, get yourself to the ballot box
ladies, it's get yourself to the ballot box so we can later talk about how you
don't need to be considered minorities for purposes of the Equal Protection
Clause. So again, doomsday Cassandra here raving harpy but it's gonna happen. Correct? Correct. Yeah. I mean
I do think that this you know series of exchanges at the at oral argument is
cremated sort of foreshadow all of the ways in which in you know Supreme Court
precedent is under attack more broadly and there's obviously this idea of well let's get rid of heightened scrutiny
altogether. This is the demise of equal protection as we know it. Yeah and and
then this idea too that we can just on the front end say you know what
biological differences then we you know we don't need to worry about it but as if
the invocation of biological differences wasn't the very thing used to subjugate
women forever.
And they're like, well, no, biology, QED, we win.
So can I ask about a note?
You have boobs, you can't have a job.
Right.
Yeah.
Certainly not as a bartender.
Can I ask a different question?
And again, we need to talk about Justice Thomas's concurrence.
This one was in Dobbs where Justice Thomas was like, well, we're getting rid of abortion.
There's a bunch of other decisions
that I would like to reconsider, including Obergefell
versus Hodges, the 2015 decision that legalized same-sex
marriage.
Last week, delegates of the National Meeting
for Southern Baptist, which is the largest Protestant
denomination in the country, endorsed a ban
on same-sex marriage, including a call to ask the Supreme Court
to overturn Obergefell.
How does that development fit into the broader effort
to shore up civil rights at a time
when it seems the entire civil rights settlement
is under threat from this administration
and those who support it?
Yeah, I mean, this was an obvious development
and just shout out, it's the 10 year anniversary
of Obergefell and 22.
Let's talk about the good thing.
And, but I think too, we just,
it should be a wake up call to us
that we have to stop being complacent.
Because this was always the play.
They never gave up the game on marriage equality.
It was very clear.
And actually, what's so frustrating about all of the calls
from, I don't know, our so-called friends
about why did you pick this fight
about trans people in bathrooms?
Guess how that fight started.
It started the day after Obergefell was decided
as an effort to say, we're not giving up
on marriage equality, we're not giving up on marriage equality,
we're gonna undermine your equality efforts
and every single time you introduce
a non-discrimination measure,
we're gonna talk about trans people in bathrooms.
And all of that work is being done
to erode all of these equality norms for everyone,
but also for cisgender gay people.
And so this effort to divide us,
this effort to act like,
if you just drop trans people, don't worry,
your marriages will be safe, is patently absurd,
and people should know that, and we can't be complacent,
and we have to mobilize together.
(*audience applauds*)
I actually wanted to ask about another case
that we discussed last week,
this literally straight rights case, Ames, in which our take was that actually the
court made it easier for straight plaintiffs to allege sexual orientation
discrimination, but we thought there was a silver lining in the case and we're
curious to get your take on it and that silver lining was that the case does
cite Bostock, right, which holds that discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity
is sex discrimination under Title VII.
And Sam Alito joined that opinion
and he did not spontaneously combust.
And that at least is something we thought of a positive sign.
Did you read it the same way?
I definitely did.
And I think I was really expecting at least a concurrence
being like, I am going to at least continue
to blodge my hatred of Bostock.
And it relies very heavily on some
of the critical parts of Bostock that we continue
to rely on in our litigation, including
in Skrimeti, which obviously isn't a statutory case.
But this idea about the protection
flowing to the individual is that was central to how Bostock was litigated and so having nine members of
the court agree with that and cite to Bostock repeatedly, it makes it a lot
harder to then overturn Bostock. Yeah. I also kept wondering like did they just
forget to append the like Alito nasty gram that was gonna end if they did
they just... It's a technical malfunction. But it really matters that he just
held his fire for whatever reason. And now that is a
unanimous statement from the court. Yeah. And you know why
he held his fire. I was like, Well, I hope it's not something
to do with some a bargain in scrimmage. But I guess we'll
see. Well, on that right note, Chase, thank you so much for
joining us.
We really appreciate it.
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All right.
I've prepared myself mentally.
We're moving on to the game segment.
And we really do love doing live shows and it is great to be in person with all of you.
And so as an expression of our appreciation and love and also
to lighten up this dark timeline somewhat we thought we would have a
little fun with some games. Okay you totally made that sound like
we're having a key party okay that was like very... Don't get excited
we're not having... So we might have to interrupt the game. Oh no.
Judge Breyer decided he wanted to participate
in said podcast.
Okay.
We have a cameo from Judge Breyer.
We have a cameo from Judge Breyer
who has ruled that President Trump's use
of the National Guard in LA was indeed unlawful.
Kate, Judge Breyer knows how scared you are of pop culture.
This timing was for me only.
To your rescue. I don't mean to be the fly in the punch bowl,
but this is clearly going up on appeal.
And I think Donald Trump right now is thinking,
you'll be back like before.
It's my moment.
You deserve it all.
OK.
Not just going to be Kataji Brown Jackson on Broadway.
Normalize black women on Broadway.
So, as the audience for a live show, you get to see us try to process something in real
time.
I brought my phone up here just in case this happened. Okay.
So Kate, do you want to opine on some pop culture while I quickly skim this so I can
say something?
Should we proceed with the game? So you're actually going to read? How long is the opinion?
It's 36 pages.
Yeah, this is literally how we do it. All right. She has a speed, an actual factual speed reader.
And she's been talking the whole time.
This is literally how Leah Lippman rolls.
Yeah.
So if you guys could amuse the audience for like a few minutes, I'll be back.
Is this my moment?
I think it is.
Let's talk about the game.
Should we talk about the game?
We'll set the game up. This talk about the game? All right.
We'll set the game up.
This is going to be a little surreal.
We're going to set up a game about epic breakups.
Let her work.
Let her cook.
It's a breakups game.
All right.
So here's the setup.
We are going into summer.
And usually, this is the time for a summer romance, a summer fling, something fun, flirty. It's not intended to last until September,
like Danny and Sandy in Greece.
Summer lovin', if you will.
But sometimes a summer romance ends a little early.
And this summer, we have been plagued with some epic breakups
that I think we really need to talk about on the pod, right? The
girls have been fighting, right? The game is called Breakup Bracket, okay? All right,
here's how the game works. We're going to give you some content about some pretty
iconic breakups, but we're not just going to tell you about them,
we're going to pit these breakups against each other, okay?
For the title of most iconic breakup.
So we're gonna have two separate breakups
and we are each going to make the case
for why that breakup should be considered the most iconic.
And then of course we will involve you
as the trier of fact, if you will,
and you will help us determine which breakup was the most epic. And we're just going to go through
a bunch of truly iconic breakups until we get to the most iconic. Until Leah finishes the opinion.
Until Leah finishes the opinion. And then we'll talk about Briar. And then we'll come back and
finish the game. When we break up with democracy. That's right. Or break up with fascism for a minute. Yeah. This is going to the
court so I'm just anticipating. Okay first bracket Melissa is going to argue the Donald Trump Leonard
Leo breakup and I will argue the Brett Kavanaugh John Roberts breakup. Okay let us begin. Many of you are already briefed on the particulars of
the Trump-Leo breakup but to summarize a few weeks ago after a three-judge panel
of the Court of International Claims which included a Trump appointed judge
ruled against the president on his tariffs, the president as is his want took to Truth Social to call Leonard Leo
quote, a sleazebag and a bad person who in his own way probably hates America.
Leo is of course the mastermind behind the Federalist Society's
meteoric rise and he was, you can hiss, and he was instrumental in stocking the Federal
Judiciary with conservative judges during the first Trump administration.
Here is my case.
I could just stop now, but I will say this is obviously the more iconic breakup in this
bracket because the GOP really only loves three things, right?
They love tax cuts, they love judges,
they love a pre-1954 America,
and this breakup basically cuts out two of those things.
I'm gonna let you guess which one sticks around.
So this Leo Trump
bromance has given us Neil, Brett, Amy on the Supreme Court, pretty sizable. It has
also given us Jim, Andy, Kyle, Lawrence, and Justin. And no, that is not a
struggle-y 2000s boy band like 98 Degrees.
I know, you will not stand for this Nick Lachey erasure.
These are the names of Trump-appointed circuit judges, and these are the same judges who
basically stay auditioning for the post of America's next top justice. So the fact that Donald Trump and Leonard Leo
are no longer together, I think is pretty epic.
Do you agree?
I feel like this is good.
That's always a hard act to follow.
I will say, just look at Brett's face in that picture.
That is not spliced together.
That is an actual picture of the two of them melody found. That's powerful evidence of what they had
once, but no longer seem to have. So basically, John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh were once like
John Roberts and John Roberts number one fan boy. That is who Brett Kavanaugh was on the DC Circuit.
There was a profile that McKay Coppins wrote of Kavanaugh
that recounted that in Kavanaugh's DC Circuit chambers,
there was a blown up photograph of Kavanaugh
with the chief on the wall.
Friends reported that Brett idolizes John Roberts.
Quote, this is what an actual source told the reporter,
if you're looking for soulmate types, that's them.
So going from number one fan to semi-hater
is, I think, a pretty big thing.
It has definitely created a more precarious situation
at the court when it comes to restraining
the Trump administration, because Brett is not in play
in a lot of really important executive power cases,
and so it comes down to the Democratic appointees
and potentially John, and then maybe Amy.
And did the chief ghost Kavanaugh forbear it
or has coach Kavanaugh fallen prey
to the wiles of Sam and Clarence?
But either way, the consequences for democracy
are quite significant.
So I want to rebuttal.
Where is the evidence other than he's not with the Chief Justice all
of the time that they've actually broken up? We haven't gotten the big cases from
this term. That's true. So I'm happy to revisit this debate after July 1st.
But have you met your burden? Leah can decide. Okay, here's the thing. I'm gonna
conclude this is a tie. It's a draw. Because both of these quote
breakups are like the Spider-Man meme where one Spider-Man is pointing at the other Spider-Man
and they're the same person. So I'm not convinced. It's a draw. Sorry. We'll take a draw. Congratulations.
You're both winners. Thank you. Okay. Speaking of winning, a quick recap of the opinion slash order
Judge Breyer just gave us.
And I apologize if this is a little rough.
I was literally taking screenshots
of different opinions, parts of the opinion on my phone
that I wanted to be sure I touched on.
So first, Judge Breyer rejects the government's argument
that the court cannot review the grounds
for the president's federalization
of the National Guard.
So he says, yes, of course courts owe
the president deference.
They can't review the president's factual determinations,
but at least in the context of domestic matters,
courts get to decide whether the president
correctly applied this statute.
So the president invoked two grounds
for federalizing the National Guard.
One is that the country was, as we jokingly said,
in rebellion.
That was the dancing.
Yeah, that was the dancing part.
The second is that the federal government
wasn't able to execute federal
law without the involvement of the National Guard. So on the rebellion front,
Judge Breyer is basically like, get real guys. This isn't a rebellion. This is
called First Amendment activity and protest. Exactly. exactly. Shorter Charles Brier, everybody cut, everybody cut.
Charles Brier also invokes some interesting sources to support the idea that rebellion really is not synonymous with political protests.
So he cites Wuthering Heights. Um, oh yeah.
Examples of this usage include spiritual rebellion.
The event of this evening has reconciled me
to God and humanity.
I had risen in angry rebellion against providence.
Quoting Bronte, Wuthering Heights.
Okay, he's literally stunting on that.
I know.
He's like, I read.
I can read.
I know.
Unlike you, buffoons.
So he also goes through different examples about how, of course, there is some violence
here, but violence might be necessary for a rebellion, but isn't sufficient.
And he goes through again different examples
of how there has been you know some violence in political protests throughout
American history. He also notes that you know protests against the federal
government is a core civil liberty protected by the First Amendment and so
that cannot justify finding a rebellion. Yes. Okay. So then he also concludes that the president did not
actually sufficiently determine that it wasn't possible to execute federal law
in the absence of federalizing the National Guard. So he says while ICE was
not able to detain as many people as defendants,
read Stephen Miller, believe it could have, ICE was nonetheless able to execute the federal
immigration laws.
Then on this point about whether the order has to go through the governor, Judge Breyer
agrees with the state that of course these orders have to go through the governor as
the statute says. Reading!
Reading, according to Judge Breyer, is fundamental, right?
So very, very good there.
He notes that, of course, the order the president said wrote at the top of it through the governor
that he says is not sufficient to actually satisfy the statute.
Also he notes that, you know, again, it just doesn't matter that they, again, told the
governor allegedly instead it requires more meaningful consent.
Finally, Judge Breyer adds that they are in violation of the 10th Amendment because they
are usurping the state's police power. Federalism! Federalism! It's a thing.
He's totally stunting on them. He is. States' rights, you bitches. So... It's not just for integration anymore.
No, it is not.
I also wanted to note some real troll energy in this opinion, which I have to say respect
to.
So, toward the closing of the opinion, Judge Breyer suggests that the federal government
is harming California because they are depriving the state for two months of its own use of National Guard members
to, among other things, combat the fentanyl trade.
That's good.
Oh dang, Gina.
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
Judge Breyer has also been reading the news
because he ordered the plaintiff
to post a nominal bond of $100.
This is important because there's currently a proposal in Congress that would limit court's
authority to hold officers in contempt of violating court orders that don't have a bond
accompanying them.
So Judge Breyer is dotting his I's, crossing his T's, and ensure he can haul these goons off to jail if need be.
Okay. No, wait, wait. You know what would have been absolutely iconic?
What? If he'd made the bond one dollar, like Taylor Swift, and nominal damages. That would
have been iconic. Iconic? I'm still going to classify this opinion as iconic.
No, but the opinion, I mean, it could have been even more iconic.
Yes, I mean, some notes, I mean,
the guy did turn it around in a few hours.
I mean, impressive.
Wait, so I don't wanna put you in the spot,
but does he do anything to stay the order at the end?
Like, what is it, what do we know about?
Wait, it is ordered.
So a hearing on this order to show cause
will be held on June 20th.
Okay, order, yeah. The court stays cause will be held on June 20th.
The court stays this order until noon on June 13th.
Okay, so we have tomorrow.
So, 24 hours.
Okay, 24 hours stay, so they go to the 9th right now.
We should come back tomorrow and do this again.
Yeah.
Don't worry, we have more games.
Don't worry.
We actually do. We had to cut some. We actually do have more games. Don't worry. We actually do.
We had to cut some.
We actually do have more games.
But we're busy tomorrow.
But wow.
That is both a great result and I just love that all of you got to see Leah Lippman do
this in real time.
Real time.
Real time.
That is iconic.
The opinion is iconic and that display was iconic.
These guys can't fucking read.
I will read an opinion on a stage live that is 36 pages.
And yet, like, just...
I mean, they are the Lea Michele of administrations.
Too soon, too soon.
Just a little.
She clarified that, she said she can read.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's just a meme at this point.
Right.
Right.
Okay, can we go back to the game?
Yes, please.
Can I play some of the game?
I think so.
Can I play some of the game?
I think it'd be hard to go back to the game if it were a different outcome in this opinion,
but I think that I feel buoyed and I'm ready to do it.
Let's finish it.
Okay.
Yeah?
All right.
Back to the breakup bracket.
Bracket number two.
Donald Trump and Elon Musk.
Alright, I'm going to give a very quick and straightforward case for Trump-Musk.
I mean, you go from best buddy slash co-president to tweeting and then deleting allegations
the president is in the Epstein files and then the president threatens to criminally
prosecute you if you support the other party.
I mean, that's a big delta, right?
Between the relationship as it was
and the relationship as it is
or was like a couple of days ago, right?
Things got a little complicated in the last couple of days.
But this is a very big deal breakup.
Iconic, I'm not even sure I wanna use that word,
but it's a big deal breakup.
That's my succinct case for this as the winner.
Okay, hear me out
Let me tell you the ballad of John and Sam. So these two were not just casual acquaintances
They actually came to the Supreme Court as brothers in 2005 both were nominated by George W Bush within months of each other and
Obviously one was the chief the other was a spare if
you will, but they were pretty much in step for most of their early careers on
the court. I mean look at them they're even dressed alike, right? Like they like
like you wear the red tie, no you wear the red tie, like why don't we both wear
the red tie and they're doing it. So what makes
this a new era in their bromance is that now the spare is publicly shit-talking
the chief. And he's possibly doing it on background to the press. And honestly I'm
just gonna say it's giving Prince Harry and Prince William
but without the very hot American wife. That checks out. So I'm gonna play judge
since I just read and processed a judge's order. So now that Elon is
walking back this breakup, real we break up, we make up energy.
Or as Taylor Swift foretold, I say, I hate you,
we break up, you call me, I love you.
But when Elon tweets, I regret some of my posts
about President Trump last week, they went too far.
This one definitely goes to John Roberts and Sam Alito
because Sam Alito knows how to hold a fucking grudge.
Like, they are never ever getting back together.
Like, ever.
Big Virgo energy.
Yeah.
OK.
Yeah.
OK.
All right.
Next category, round three, this is friends to frenemies.
And we're going to let Kate judge this one for reasons.
OK.
This bracket pits, ready?
NeNe Leakes and Kim Zolziak, Bravo Andy
is merely a bystander in all of this,
against Taylor Swift and Blake Lively.
OK.
So let me explain, for those of you
who are unfamiliar with the Housewives universe, the
NeNe Kim fallout.
This happened at an Atlanta reunion and the breakup was so completely epic.
I mean, this is the breakup that gave us NeNe Leakes' most iconic line ever, close your
legs to married men. Is that the most iconic line from
Atlanta? I don't know, I think who gon check me boo might be more iconic.
That's fair, but that just gives me a leg up to argue that the break up between
Taylor and Blake is the more iconic one and there's a legal hook to this one as
well, which is that Taylor-
There was adultery in the other one.
Well, okay.
But this is Taylor Swift, who was irritated
that she got swept up into Blake's legal fight
with Justin Baldoni, during which Taylor was subpoenaed.
And maybe, maybe to get back in Taylor's good graces,
there was reports that Blake might subpoena Scooter Braun.
Alright, I get to judge this one. I would normally go with Taylor and Blake because
I've heard of everyone involved. But I'm hoping they get back together. I am not
convinced it is a real breakup, so I shall go with Nae Nae and Kim. Even though I
literally just learned and apparently didn't even retain
who those people are.
That's my ruling.
All right.
Okay.
Let's move on to another category.
I'm actually blushing hard.
All right.
We're going to call this one Toxic Men and the Women Who Try to Love Them.
Okay.
Well, I mean, not like that.
She didn't try to love him like that.
But that is Sandra Day O'Connor and Justice Scalia.
O'Connor was notably cooler towards Scalia
relative to her other colleagues
as their time on the bench went on.
She famously tried to get all the justices to get along.
Scalia was
really antagonistic toward her. Early on he described one of her opinions as
irrational and not to be taken seriously. Shockingly did not, you know, endear him
to his new colleague. Obviously this is Ben Affleck and all of the Jennifers in
the world. So Ben Affleck has just gone
from Jennifer to Jennifer and progressively flamed out in a more
fantastic way with each of them. Jennifer Lopez for the second time and I truly
was rooting for them. I know. I really really was. So I think at this point this
is an epic breakup and not only is it, I think it must lead Ben Affleck
to the self-realization that, in fact, no Jennifer
is truly the love of his life.
And in fact, the real loves of his life
are Boston, Dunkin' Donuts, and Matt Damon.
Melissa, I know when I've lost an argument,
I'm just going to concede here.
Ben and Jen's are the more iconic breakup.
You win.
I've been winning all of these.
Maybe I should have been a litigator.
No?
Yes.
Let's make you judge for the next bracket, okay?
Okay.
So we can make it a fair fight.
Okay.
All right, so this bracket, round five,
Pitts Chief Justice Warren Burger
and former Associate Justice Harry Blackmon
against Taylor Swift and Carly Klaas.
Kate, you will argue for Taylor and Carly.
No.
No.
Just kidding. Thank you. I felt a little disrespected there. Kate, why don't you explain the Blackman burger beef?
Way more comfortable on this terrain. All right. So we are talking about the once
deep friendship between Warren Burger and Harry Blackman. It started in a St.
Paul,
Minnesota kindergarten classroom, continued through decades of very intense correspondence,
saw Blackmon as best man in Burger's wedding, they were simultaneously on two different
courts of appeals, and then had this epic reunion at the Supreme Court.
But that reunion proved fatal for the Minnesota twins.
They grew further and further apart during
their time on the court. This was in part because of Blackman's steady shift to the
left, but also in part because of Berger's sort of imperious style as Chief Justice.
And by the end of their time on the court, these ones like genuine great friends were
virtual strangers, if not outright enemies. I know, it sounds intriguing, but here's the thing.
The Taylor breakup gave us Down Bad,
where Taylor sings about how I lost my twin.
It also gave us It's Time to Go,
where the words of a sister come back and whispers.
Also, I'm glad we reserved this venue for 24 hours
because I'm gonna be here all night making my case.
But okay, so at the final night in the Los Angeles concert
where Carly showed up unexpectedly, I was literally standing between them
in Taylor's line of sight to Carly Kloss.
And I can just tell you this breakup wins.
And in closing, and if you know, you know,
and you'll know I've won this one,
I'll just say it hits different with you.
And with that, I rest my case.
I won.
Melissa, do you want to make a ruling?
That's like such Pamela Jo Bondi energy for you.
No, but she was not shouting. I won.
I won.
That's way harsh, Ty.
This is a really tough one.
I loved your whole exposition, Kate.
I like that you humanized it, brought it back to kindergarten.
Those letters are intense.
Yeah.
But she had quotes, so I'm going to give it to Leah.
Thank you.
Thank you.
All right.
Final bracket, round six.
This one pits Donald Trump and pre-J.D. Vance Mike Pence
against Tom Sandoval and Ariana Maddox.
Kate, I will let you argue on behalf of Trump Pence.
Yeah, clearly.
Clearly, that's the one I'm doing.
OK, again, a fairly straightforward case.
There was a literal riot where people were calling
to hang Mike Pence.
President Trump threw his VP under the bus,
placed him in mortal danger by encouraging
a riot in which people were calling for Pence to be hanged.
High stakes for the relationship, high stakes for democracy.
Seems like a bigger deal breakup than the other one.
It sounds like a big deal, but Donald Trump told me that was a day of love.
And there was no love in that post-filming episode of Vanderpump Rules,
because when Tom asked Arianaanna if she needed anything her
response was for you to die. It generated the iconic I regret ever
loving you and I don't care about fucking Raquel. Plus she's now the host of
Love Island which despite everything you may have heard is not a show about
vacationing January 6 rioters and unlike and Pence, this breakup has its own name.
Skandival. What's the phrase for the failed Trump and Pence relationship?
There isn't one. I believe it's insurrection. I'm gonna give this one to
Kate. Yeah. All right.
We got to land this plane, this Qatari jet, this emolument, if you will.
So we are going to end the show by doing what we always do, which is recounting our favorite
things from the weeks, the best things that we've read, seen, watched, whatever.
So kick it off.
All right.
And we're going to be very quick.
So first, Melody has another podcast in addition to our podcast, the Culture
Study podcast with Anne Helen Peterson. And they had a great interview last week with
Sophie Gilbert, author of Girl on Girl, a really excellent book we've all recommended.
So check that episode out. And the other thing I'll recommend is Steve Lottick, friend of
the pod, has his latest installment of One First Street is about federalizing the California
National Guard. He is just an incredible resource on all of the deep sort of dimensions of the legal questions we were discussing here.
So read that and also follow him as this continues to unfold.
And finally, this isn't a thing I read or watched or anything, but I want to call out Argent,
the designer whose clothing we are all wearing tonight. We are very colorful and their wonderful clothing
is the reason why.
Ambition suits us.
I guess so.
So my favorite things are Michelle Goldberg's piece
in the New York Times, this is what autocracy looks like.
And yeah, that was phenomenal if you haven't read it.
Also, I was also gonna say our Argent fits.
Thank you, Argent, for making women's work wear fun.
Okay, I would like to recommend
L.A. Mistal's latest column in The Nation,
What the Hell is Posse Comitatus Anyway?
It's a great primer on the reconstruction-era roots
of the Posse Comitatus Act,
as well as a very bracing distillation
of everything that could go wrong
with what is happening in L and elsewhere. I'll also recommend Amazon
Prime's adaptation of Alaphair Burke's fantastic book, The Better Sister, with
Elizabeth Banks and Jessica Biel. I also want to shout out my mom friend, Sarah
Sklarandis, who provided the amazing shoes that Kate is wearing. Yeah.
Kate was like, what do you think?
And I'm like, I have the perfect shoe for you.
And she's like, what does it look like?
I mean, it's a leopard print but blue.
And Kate looked scared.
I did.
But I generally do what Melissa tells me,
and it generally works out well.
And I think it worked out well here.
So we are super grateful to Argent and Sally Christensen
and Sarah for helping get us dressed.
Again, women's work wear does not have to be terrible.
It can be fun.
Someone please tell the folks in the Trump administration.
Ah.
So to wrap up, we have some final thank yous.
Thank you to our tour manager, Sophie Eisenstadt.
Thank you.
Woohoo!
Thank you to our producer producer Melody Rowell. Thank you to our intern
Jordan Thomas. And thank you to the amazing detox for opening the show when I
say it was the fucking best to be able to appear on a stage after deep talks. I mean hashtag goals
Hi, it's Leah and here's your post live show update on the military occupation of Los Angeles and the legal challenges to it on
Friday the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit issued an administrative stay of Judge Breyer's
decision. An administrative stay puts the decision that is Judge Breyer's
decision on hold until the Court of Appeals decides whether to grant a more
long-lasting stay. Judge Breyer's decision had invalidated Trump federalizing the
California National Guard and the Ninth Circuit scheduled very quick briefing
and argument to decide whether to grant a more long-lasting stay.
The argument is scheduled for the 17th Tuesday, so the order isn't going to go into effect
before that.
Judge Breyer's decision did not address the lawfulness of Trump deploying the Marines.
In order to federalize the California National Guard, the Trump administration relied on
a statute 12406 that addresses the National Guard, so the administration had to rely on another source of authority to
deploy the Marines, and Breyer's order only addressed the lawfulness of calling up the
California National Guard under 12406.
Breyer determined that it was unnecessary, and too soon, to determine whether the California
National Guardsmen were violating the Posse Comitatus Act by engaging in ordinary
law enforcement.
Events seem to have superseded poor Judge Breyer, just like his order kind of threw
a wrench into our live show.
Specifically, there have now been reports of Marines detaining American citizens, which
at the time Judge Breyer issued his order had not yet clearly materialized.
That matters because it tees up the question of not only whether the president had the
authority to call up the Marines under these circumstances,
but also whether the actions that the Marines are taking constitute the kind of ordinary law enforcement that the Posse Comitatus Act prohibits the military from engaging in.
Oh, and who was the citizen who was detained by the Marines? a Black veteran. And again, this looks pretty illegal under the Posse Comitatus
Act because detaining someone who purportedly crosses
a taped boundary, that's kind of ordinary law enforcement.
That's not protecting federal personnel or property.
And that's all the updates we have for now.
We had a wonderful time in New York City.
If you were one of the people who stuck around
after the show for the meet and greet and took a picture,
we would love to be able to see those pictures. so please feel free to send them to us. Thanks,
everyone.
Just a couple of things to tell you about before we go. First, Inside 2025. If you join
the Friends of the Pod community today, you can unlock subscriber-only shows like Inside
2025, plus lots of other exclusive perks. We actually, Leah and Melissa and I, hosted the last episode of Inside 2025 and we pulled
back the curtain on what really happens inside the Supreme Court, especially in June when
the opinions are flying fast and furious.
So subscribe to the Friends of the Pod community today to unlock Inside 2025 and so much more.
That's at crooked.com slash friends. Also, as you of course know, there
was an outpouring of overwhelmingly peaceful protest
activity in Los Angeles this past weekend in response
to ICE raids targeting community members.
Trump is escalating the situation.
He's deployed the National Guard to LA
in hopes of seizing more power for ICE and for the presidency
and also seems to be trying to turn the media against the protesters.
We've made very clear we think this is a blatant abuse of power.
It is designed to intimidate families and stoke fear and break the spirit of the community.
And there are lots of important ways to respond.
One way is what our friends at Vote Save America are doing, which is raising money for immigration
defense groups.
So you can go to votesaveamerica.com slash support if you want to donate what you can
to help in that effort.
This was paid for by votesaveamerica.com, not authorized by any candidate or candidates
committee.
Strix Grutny is a Crooked Media production hosted and executive produced by Leah Lipman,
me Melissa Murray and Kate Shaw.
Produced and edited by Melody Rowell, Michael Goldsmith is our associate producer. We get audio support from Kyle Seglen and
Charlotte Landis. Our music is by Eddie Cooper. We get production support from Madeline Herringer,
Katie Long, and Ari Schwartz. Matt DeGroote is our head of production and we are thankful for
our digital team, Ben Hefkoat and Joe Matoski. Our production staff is proudly unionized with
the Writers Guild of America East.
You can subscribe to Strict Scrutiny on YouTube to catch full episodes. Find us at youtube.com
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