Wednesday round-up

Reporting on Monday’s orders and opinions, particularly the Court’s decision to grant cert. in Arizona v. United States, continued to keep Court watchers and commentators busy yesterday.  In Arizona the Court will consider overturning the lower courts’ decisions blocking the controversial Arizona immigration law, S.B. 1070. Daniel Fisher of Forbes discusses the preemption issue at the heart of the case.  The editorial boards at Bloomberg, USA Today, and the Los Angeles Times all weigh in on the grant, while at Politico Tim Mak surveys the blogosphere’s reactions to Justice Kagan’s recusal in the case.  At Balkinization Ken Kersh responds to Adam Liptak’s article in the New York Times (included in yesterday’s round-up), which compares what is fast becoming a blockbuster Term this year to past noteworthy Terms.  And finally, Lyle Denniston at the Huffington Post and Josh Gerstein at Politico both discuss the potential political fallout from the Court’s decisions this Term in the health care, S.B. 1070, and Texas redistricting cases – a subject that is also covered by a video clip posted at PBS NewsHour.

Monday’s other opinions and orders received continuing coverage as well.  At this blog, Kevin Johnson analyzes the opinion in Judulang v. Holder, in which the Court unanimously held that the policy used by the Board of Immigration Appeals to determine whether a resident alien may seek relief from deportation under a repealed immigration law is “arbitrary and capricious” under the Administrative Procedure Act.  At the ABA Journal, Mark Hansen discusses the cert. grant in the consolidated cases Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi Indians v. Patchak and Salazar v. Patchak, in which the Court will consider whether private citizens or groups may sue to enjoin the federal government from purchasing lands for use by Native American tribes.  And Jessie Balmert at the Newark (Ohio) Advocate discusses Monday’s cert. denial in Ohio v. D.B., in which the state had asked the Court to review the constitutionality of the state’s statutory rape law as it applied to children under the age of thirteen.

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Posted in: Round-up

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