Friday round-up

Commentary continues on Collins v. Virginia, in which the justices held on Tuesday that the automobile exception to the warrant requirement does not permit a warrantless search of a vehicle parked in the driveway of a home. At PrawfsBlawg, Leah Litman notes that “Justice Thomas wrote a separate opinion in which he questioned the application of the exclusionary rule to the states,” which she argues exemplifies the court’s tendency to “engage in something of a shell game with respect to remedies for violations related to policing.” At The Daily Signal, Elizabeth Slattery and John-Michael Seibler maintain that Thomas’ “proposed … answer … bucks Supreme Court precedent, but holds true to the original meaning of the Constitution.”

At the Election Law Blog, Bill Whitford, the lead plaintiff in partisan-gerrymandering case Gill v. Whitford, explains that his challenge to Wisconsin’s electoral map “propose[s] a statewide analysis that compares statewide votes to seats,” and that although “[a]t first glance it may appear that a district-by-district approach would be a less intrusive limitation on what has traditionally been a legislative function (redistricting),” “[i]n fact, a district-by-district approach will involve the courts in many of the problems that historically made them reluctant to place constitutional restraints on partisan gerrymanders, and to a much greater degree than if the courts proceeded on a statewide analysis.” Flippable offers a guide to Whitford and Benisek v. Lamone, “the cases that could impact elections for a generation.

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