Friday round-up

We have changed our round-up format!  In an effort to simplify the process for our round-up team, going forward we will only include in the round-up news articles and posts that are submitted to us.  If you have (or know of) an article or post that you would like to have included in the round-up, please send a link to roundup [at] scotusblog.com so that we can consider it.

Thursday’s coverage of the Court continued to focus on retired Justice Sandra Day O’Connor’s recent comments to The Chicago Tribune, in which she expressed doubt about the Court’s grant of certiorari in Bush v. Gore.  At Constitution Daily, Lyle suggests that in a “constitutional crisis” like the one faced in 2000, it is “impossible to imagine that America would have been content to let a lower court resolve” the issue.  Doug Mataconis at Outside the Beltway agrees, suggesting that “an argument can be made that the Court did the right thing” in granting certiorari, as the Court’s involvement “brought some degree of certainty into the process and lent an air of legal legitimacy to the outcome of the election that was sorely lacking during the long period after Election Day.”  At the Daily Beast, Megan McArdle argues that the Court “probably came up with the least problematic response,” and that it is difficult to comprehend a way in which the Court “could have stayed out of it” – a sentiment with which Andrew Sullivan, at The Dish, agrees.  [Disclosure:  The law firm of Thomas C. Goldstein, P.C., now known as Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys work for or contribute to this blog in various capacities, was among the counsel to respondent Al Gore in that case.]

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