Monday round-up

For The Washington Post, Robert Barnes reports that Chief Justice John Roberts has met with criticism for suggesting during the oral argument in partisan-gerrymandering case Gill v. Whitford “that forcing the court to make … decisions” about “when normal politics became unconstitutional bias” “would put the justices in a no-win position and tarnish the reputation that they — he — had worked hard to burnish.” At the Post’s Volokh Conspiracy blog, David Post hopes that the court does not rely on its relative lack of expertise in statistical analysis to “abdicate its responsibility” in Whitford “to craft some meaningful and manageable measures of partisan interference with the electoral process.”

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