Thursday round-up

At the American Constitution Society, Rick Hasen analyzes the significance of the Ninth Circuit’s decision to issue a stay of Judge Walker’s decision in Perry v. Schwarzenegger, concluding that “both opponents and proponents of gay marriage should read very little into” the order. He suggests that the stay may in fact help proponents of same-sex marriage because it could allow public support for the of possible shifts in public opinion favoring their view in the time before the case reaches Supreme Court. At the Christian Science Monitor, Daniel Wood similarly recounts recent developments in the case and the prospect that a delay could benefit proponents of same-sex marriage.  And at the San Francisco Chronicle, Bob Egelko considers the effect that the Court’s 1997 decision in Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona may have on the Proposition 8 litigation. In the earlier case, the Court expressed doubt that sponsors of a ballot initiative had standing to defend the law in federal court.

Yesterday the Court released the list of clerks for the October 2010 Term.  This blog and the BLT both have coverage, with the BLT reporting that Harvard Law School has the most clerks and this blog reporting that Judge Merrick Garland of the D.C. Circuit is the judge sending the most clerks (six out of thirty nine).

Briefly:

Posted in: Round-up

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