Oral Arguments
This week was largely intermediate as we tried to forget what was coming next time. For instance, a deputy Biden solicitor general argued a case on Wednesday, the last one for the Biden Justice Department. He took a moderate position.
The case is of some importance for accessing online speech. My red flag was the low "one-third" threshold -- the law covered websites where most of the material was not whatever sexual material harmful to minors entails. A term that in practice will be overbroad.
The other cases were more eye-glazing over. I didn't listen to much of them but do not think we had bits like Alito talking about being carded when buying wine. What sort of wine do you like, Sam?
Pam Bondi Confirmation Hearing
Meanwhile, Pam Bondi's confirmation took place with the expected "highlights." She's a Trump hack but meets the low threshold of competence when compared to some of Trump's other picks. I would vote against her. If many Democrats vote for her, however, I would not be surprised.
There is no special magical thing Democrats can do in these situations, even if some people are annoyed at so-called "business as usual" hearings. They do not control the Senate. They are flagging problems, including being suitably annoyed at her bullshit.
These are Trump nominees and the most we can hope for is so degree of competence, especially in the also ran type Cabinet slots. Pam Bondi is a troubling case given the ability of the Justice Department to abuse its power in particularly dangerous ways. She can do that while not being Robert Kennedy-esque about it.
Opinions
Monday's Order List suggests the ho-hum nature of the week overall, down to Alito and Barrett continuing the conservative justices' policy of not explaining why they do not take part in certain cases. Kavanaugh and Kagan had unanimous ho-hum opinions.
There are still some little tidbits that caught my eye. Gorsuch concurred briefly in the first case to sanctimoniously show that justices do not make policy. I found this a bit curious since the issue involved a common law rule, which is a judge-made law that tends to balance policy in some fashion. It is not just some above-the-fray sort of affair.
Kagan's opinion was longer in part to explain why the lower court was incorrect (at least in hindsight) to rely on something the Supreme Court previously said. It included a bit too blithely phrased dicta (a portion of an opinion not necessary for the judgment).
As she notes, the Supreme Court gets to decide that. The lower court was not wrong to rely on it until the justices made things clearer. Anyway, don't take it too seriously! One of the cases covered was written by her old boss, Justice Marshall. It might have been her term as a clerk too. If so, logically she would know of it.
Kagan also has done a good job clearly expressing the law in these law school-type cases. For instance, a conservative-leaning law professor who regularly kneejerks ideologically praised her analysis.
Biden Final Address
On the goals for the future front, President Biden in his final speech to the nation reaffirmed his support of court reform, which has bipartisan popular support:
We need to enact an 18-year time limit, term limit, time and term for the strongest ethics -- and the strongest ethics reforms for our Supreme Court.
Likewise, without citing Trump, he again supported an amendment "to make clear that no president — no president — is immune from crimes that he or she commits while in office."
Some were annoyed that Biden didn't promote his goals expressed in the speech before now. He has spoken about the themes addressed in various respects. He had many accomplishments.
People do have some reason to critique him for going so slow on judicial reform. Nonetheless, to hit an old hobbyhorse, his presidential commission on the Supreme Court provided an opening that OTHERS also failed to seize. The public has shown their discontent on this issue. It has potential.
Tom Goldstein
Tom Goldstein, a top U.S. Supreme Court attorney, and publisher of the SCOTUSblog news website, was indicted on Thursday in Maryland federal court for allegedly failing to report millions of dollars he won in poker matches and using his former law firm's accounts to pay his gambling debts.
Ouch. I have long found SCOTUSblog a very helpful resource, including his wife's (Amy Howe) reporting and commentary. Goldstein's own views sometimes leave something to be desired, including a suggestion that Trump's election should wipe away his guilt.
His possible guilt should not erase the value of the blog and hopefully, it will not be negatively affected.
BTW, some have suggested his infamous op-ed was really a way to get in Trump's good graces akin to Mayor Eric Adams (also indicted) going to the Florida White House and talking up Trump some. Either way, the op-ed was moronic.
Tik-Tok Ban Upheld
The Supreme Court put a notice on its website on Thursday that opinion(s) would be released on Friday without them showing up on the bench. As expected, this was about the Tik-Tok ban. Which was upheld.
The unsigned opinion was narrowly written to address the legitimacy of safeguarding data from foreign adversities. Justice Sotomayor briefly noted the law clearly affected speech. Gorsuch had a sound longer statement in part appreciating (as do I) that they did not rely on classified material.
President Biden has announced he will not enforce the ban (which kicks in a day before he leaves office and any enforcement would require investigation). So, the whole thing might not matter too much.
Still, it is appreciated the opinion is carefully done, even if some might reasonably argue the law should be struck down. Finally, unlike multiple Trump cases, we see the Court can speed things along when it wants to do so.
Upcoming
Roberts will have to work on the holiday -- Monday is Martin Luther King Jr.'s Birthday (observed) as well as the inauguration of you know who. Roberts swearing in the person he helped get the job is fitting.
The next scheduled order list and oral argument day is thus shifted to Tuesday. First, the Supreme Court announced Friday afternoon that it will hear five more cases. For now, we still have a constitutionally qualified president of the United States.
One of the cases involves parental opt-outs for LGBTQ-friendly lessons. It is MAGA red-meat grant. Republicans in Congress are already targeting trans people. Trump will help. What will his SCOTUS do?