At his eponymous blog, Lyle Denniston reports that Roy Moore, the chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, yesterday attempted “to stop same-sex marriage licensing throughout the state.” Other coverage of Moore’s actions comes from Mike Cason of Al.com; commentary comes from Marty Lederman at Balkinization and Howard Wasserman at PrawfsBlawg.
There is still more commentary on Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, the challenge to the requirement that public employees who decline to join the union that represents them nonetheless pay a fee to cover their share of the costs of collective bargaining. At The University of Chicago Law School Faculty Blog, Daniel Hemel contends that, even if the Court agrees with the challengers, “public-sector employers in sympathetic states still will be able to ensure that unions are reimbursed for their collective bargaining costs (including the cost of representing nonmembers). They just might have to take a different (and more straightforward) approach than the agency shop.” In an op-ed in the Chicago Tribune, Mark Janus – a plaintiff in a similar case in Illinois – argues that, if lead plaintiff Rebecca Friedrichs “wins her case, it would mean freedom for government workers like me.” At National Review’s Bench Memos, Robert Alto has a two-part series responding to Justice Elena Kagan’s dissent in Harris v. Quinn, in which the Court previously considered (but did not decide) the question now before the Court.
A post at Immigration Prof Blog discusses the challenge to the Obama administration’s immigration policy and concludes that “there is little question that the Supreme Court will grant the U.S. government’s petition for certiorari.” At Crime and Consequences, Kent Scheidegger observes that the federal government has a high rate of success with its petitions for review, which could “make[] it considerably easier” for the Court to grant another petition, in a “challenge to the effective nullification of large portions of immigration law through nonenforcement.”
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