Transcribe your podcast
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Mr.

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Chief Justice, may I please report.

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It's an old joke, but when I argue a man argues against two beautiful ladies like this, they're going to have the last word. She spoke not elegantly, but with unmistakable clarity.

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She said, I ask no favor for my sex.

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All I ask of our Brethren is that they take their feet off our legs.

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Hello, and welcome back to Strict Scrutiny, your podcast for the last few weeks about efforts to hold Donald Trump accountable via judicial processes. But more generally, we are your podcast about the Supreme Court and the legal culture that surrounds it. And we are still your hosts. I'm Leo Littman.

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I'm Kate Shaw. I'm Melissa Murray. And today, we have updates on several of the cases against Donald Trump. And once we've covered those, give us a few moments, we will look ahead to the arguments that the court will hear this week and some of the big arguments that the court will hear the following week. Then after we've done that, we will have a healthy dose of court culture to get you up to speed on all of the things that have been happening in all of the other courts. Buckle up, listeners. It's going to be a fun and rollicking ride.

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Just For a little bit more detail on what we have in store, that court culture segment at the end of the episode is going to involve, first, the good, the bad, the ugly happening in state courts. We're going to cover Pennsylvania, Hawaii, Florida, and Wisconsin, some important LGBT rights cases percolating in the sixth Circuit, the latest antics out of the Fifth Circuit on things like qualified immunity, federal sovereignty at the border, labor rights, and more. At the very end of this episode, we're going to have a guest segment about some things you can do to get involved if you're amped up about state courts in particular. But before we get to all of that, as Melissa just mentioned, we have some updates on some of the Trump cases. Let's turn to those now.

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All right, so, listeners, we have some updates related to Donald Trump's suit for immunity in the DC federal court case that's related to January sixth. So you will recall that the district of Columbia circuit unanimously rejected his claims of immunity in this case after a very lengthy period in which we were writing a very long, methodical decision that took a long, long time. But they eventually came to the conclusion decision that Donald Trump was not entitled to immunity, and they reached that decision unanimously. Well, as we expected, Donald Trump filed his stay application on Monday, February 12th. The stay application is his request to put on hold that DC circuit decision, rejecting his immunity claims and allowing the district court to begin trial proceedings. And just so you're clear on how absolutely ludicrous his arguments are, I would recommend to you our episode about that decision. We did a bonus episode where we canvassed all of these arguments and we said, Yeah, checks out. These are dumb arguments that Donald Trump floated, and the DC circuit was absolutely correct to reject them out of hand. Yeah.

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In brief, he's relying on double jeopardy principles rather than, say, the actual double-principles. Principal. Double Jeopardy Clause. But anyways. Consistent with form, true to form, Donald Trump's request of the US Supreme Court was also quite audacious. So he is seeking not just a stay pending him seeking certiorari in the US Supreme Court, but a stay that would allow his team to first seek on banque review, i. E. Review before the entire DC circuit before he chooses to seek cert in the Supreme Court. So it's not just staying the DC circuit mandate.

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That would take a lot of time. Exactly.

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Exactly. Might be the plan here. So he's not just asking for a stay of the DC circuit mandate, but modifying their decision in a way that would allow him to prolong and push off a trial for potentially quite a long time. And his reasons for asking for this are rather transparently to get some delay. So in his brief, he wrote, He, that is Trump, is the leading candidate for President in 2024. Footnote, not exactly sure that's true, but put that to the side. Continue, Conducting a months long criminal trial of President Trump at the height of election season will radically disrupt President Trump's ability to campaign against President Biden, which appears to be the whole point of the special counsel's persistent demands for expedition, end quote. He's saying, I would like delay, and he is imputing bad motives to special counsel Jack Smith when this entire motion is a delay tactic.

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It's almost like he never wants to get to a trial where a jury will get to weigh in on whether he committed crimes. Why would that be?

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It's hard to speculate. It's almost like he thinks he is above the law. And in that vein- Or that a jury might actually convict him. Right. And that would be a real issue.

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All polling does seem to suggest that voters actually might care if someone's been convicted.

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Yeah.

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Bad. Yeah. So in this vein, he also writes, quote, Without immunity from criminal prosecution, the presidency, as we know, it will cease to exist, end quote. An interesting observation, given that the President has never enjoyed immunity from criminal prosecution, it is really Trump's argument that would fundamentally change the presidency as we know it and basically create a law-free zone where who holds the office of the President can do whatever they want that has some tangential connection to their office and do some crimes in the process.

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Right. So that's what he's asking. When it got Trump's filing, this stay application, the Supreme Court requested a response from Special Counsel Jack Smith by Tuesday, February 20th. That was the deadline. It was a little over a week following the initial stay application. But Smith got his homework done very, very early. He filed his response just two days later on February 14th. Happy Valentine's Day, Skotas. As expected, that filing by Smith's office, and in particular by criminal law expert Michael Drieben, who used to be in the SG's office and then was in private practice, and then has come back into government to join Smith's team. In his response, he urged the court to deny the state request. The filing really did try to focus on what Leah and Melissa were just talking about, what's really at stake here. The filing reminds the court that at issue are alleged acts that, strike at the heart of our democracy. That's what is being charged. The filing also emphasized that on any fair application of the standards for granting a stay, the stay just has to be denied. Trump does not have a fair likelihood of succeeding in his novel immunity arguments.

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You're only supposed to get a stay if you have a fair chance of succeeding on the merits of your argument. It is also the case that the public interest is clearly in having this trial happen so that a jury can decide whether Trump is guilty of trying to overturn the results of a presidential election. And public interest is also an important factor in deciding whether to grant or requested stay. First, the response says, Do not grant the stay. But it also says, If the court does decide that Trump's arguments do need to be reviewed, that the court treat this filing as a cert petition, so would not give him another opportunity to file a petition for certiorari, no. That it treat this application as a cert petition, that it grant it, and that it consider the case on a wildly expedited schedule. Specifically, the Smith filing says, The government proposes a schedule that would permit argument in March of 2024, consistent with the court's expedition of other cases meriting such treatment, including, I think, conspicuously the 14th Amendment case the court had argued last week. Trump then filed his reply the day after Smith filed his response.

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So at this stage, the case is ready for decision, and we could see some action, I think, as early as today or later this week.

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We also got an update on one of the other cases in which Donald Trump is a defendant. Just to make clear, there are four other cases in which Donald Trump is a defendant. For criminal cases. Yes, I'm sorry. Correct. Thank you, Leah. Wild times, wild times, and clarification Cribs legislation is often needed. I am referring, of course, to the New York State case that involves the Manhattan DA's office prosecution of Donald Trump for falsifying business records in conjunction with efforts to perpetrate election fraud or to violate campaign finance laws. The trial judge in that case, Justice Juan Murchan, announced that proceedings in the trial will begin on March 25th with jury selection. And that means that the New York case is likely to be the first of these four criminal cases to actually get to a trial. And again, I think that is really significant. One of these cases is going to get to trial, and this one going first is likely to wind up in an actual verdict. And this particular jury verdict, if it is a conviction, is one that Donald Trump, even if he is elected President, really can't do much about.

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He cannot pardon himself because this is a state conviction, and he's not going to be able to dispatch the Department of Justice to get rid of this prosecution or to interrupt it in any way. Now, that said, this particular case is not necessarily the most high stakes set of charges that Donald Trump is subject to. So this has been discussed a lot in the media. People derisively call this case the Hush Money case because essentially the falsification of business records was done in service of the payments of Hush Money to Michael Cohen to cover up Donald Trump's alleged affair with Stormy Daniels. So It's a little tawdry, it's a little salacious, and it doesn't seem to have the same heft as the January sixth indictment that deals with the election interference in that broader context. But I think it's really interesting how Alvin Bragg has begun to talk about this case. So he, very conspicuously, is not calling this a hush money case, but rather is talking about this as a species of election interference, that the payments of hush money were really about defrauding the voting electorate as to the nature of this relationship between Stormy Daniels and Donald Trump on the eve of an election in order to make Donald Trump a more palatable political candidate.

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I think that's really important. Judge Murchand seems like he is ready to move. When it became clear that the January sixth trial was not going to start on March fourth, as predicted, he slid in there and said, Well, we're ready to go. We can pick a jury and we can do this. It seems that there's some coordination going on, or at the very least, these judges are watching each and the proceedings. There was also a request from Donald Trump's lawyers to change the venue on the view that Donald Trump cannot get a fair trial in Manhattan, where of every four voters, three is a Democrat. And Justice Murchon beat that bag very handily, saying, This case is well known. It is a subject of national inquiry, so you might as well just stick to Manhattan. So that change of venue request was denied.

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So if you would like greater insight into the different procedural decisions that paved the way for this case to proceed to trial first, as well as the nature of the New York charges and how they relate to election interference, then cannot recommend, highly enough, Melissa Murray's forthcoming book with Andrew Weissman, The Trump Indictments: The Historic Charging Documents with commentary. It includes all of the indictments in one place, together with commentary explaining, again, the basis for the charges, the relevant state laws and federal laws and their contacts that will help you understand the nature of all these cases. And in some ways, it's fitting that the New York case is going first because as you talk about in the book, Melissa, this is criminal activity that preceded the precedency and began right at the start of his holding the office. And so here we are.

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It's like an amuse-boosh of crime. Exactly. Really? It's a little sampling to get you started. Of course, the really meaty indictments that everyone is really preoccupied with are these election interference indictments related to January 6. And that, course, is the Jack Smith federal indictment, but also the Fannie Willis state-level indictment in Georgia, where there are a number of different charges, including Georgia RICO charges, so like racketeering and corrupt organization influencing charges. There was a lot that went on in Georgia. Like the devil went down to Georgia this week, and boy, did he have a time. So if you haven't been following what's going on in Georgia, friends, Michael Roman, who is one of the defendants in that 19-person criminal indictment that Fannie Willis issued. He essentially launched the argument that Fannie Willis is ethically compromised in her prosecution of Donald Trump and the other 18 defendants on the ground, that she improperly appointed Nathan Wade to be a special prosecutor on the case. And why that appointment was improper was because, wait for it, he alleges that Fannie Willis and Nathan Wade were engaged in a romantic relationship prior to the appointment. And after the appointment, they continued in their romantic relationship.

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Nathan Wade used the funding for his position to basically go on fancy trips to Belize and Aruba and all these places. And he took Fannie Willis with him. And apparently, they were romantic in those places on the taxpayer dime. Fannie Willis should be disqualified from prosecuting this case, and this should be turned over to an independent entity in Georgia to identify a new prosecutor, likely one that doesn't have the same experience doing Georgia RICO trials that Fannie Willis does. And then maybe this will all fall apart. That's the whole thing. Also worth noting that even before Michael Roman launched this attack on Fannie Willis, there were efforts to use state laws and state administrative processes to get her off of this case or to limit her prosecutorial authority in this case. Those failed, but now we have this. So Leah, we should talk about what went down in Georgia. Because I know it was reality TV.

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Yes, it was. Maybe first, just a high-level thing. I think on one hand, interpersonal relationships among the prosecutor's office is not exactly the thing that gives rise to conflicts of interest or disqualification. They're on the same side. Exactly. The usual issue is when the prosecutor might have a relationship with defense council, judge, jury, witness, or something like that. That being said, I do think it reflects poor judgment to hire someone with whom you might be in a relationship or to start a relationship with someone you have hired into the office. But again, I don't think it gives rise to the merit.

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It's an optics thing. Of course.

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We have talked about- You don't dip your nib in the company ink. Well, that and we have talked so many times about how prosecutors have had to err on the side of being perfect, right? And giving Trump every single benefit of the doubt because they know there is this ecosystem in which their actions will be attacked, overanalyzed, and anything will be used against them. And so They have to comport themselves in very principle, careful ways. Exactly. And this wasn't that.

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This was always going to be a hard slog for her, and they were always going to attack her. But she knew there They were always going to attack her. Exactly.

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This didn't help. This gave them something that they were going to seize upon. And I think you're right. They were always going to attack her no matter what. But this is conduct that they can definitely make political hay out of. And there are still, I think, open questions as of our recording on Friday. When did the relationship start?

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There was a friend who said it started in 2019. I mean, this is how it got to be like the real housewives of Fulton County. It was very strange.

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It's salacious, for sure. And that means we're talking about that. We're not talking about Donald Trump's alleged crimes. We're not talking about that he's recorded.

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There's a recording of him telling people to find votes, right? That's what this case is about. That's important, too.

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I mean, whatever happened with Fannie Willis and Nathan Wade, and whether they were having sexy time or whatever, the charges against Donald Trump and these 18 other defendants are still valid. They're still proper. There's nothing untoward about them. And I will say, Fannie Willis took the stand to just lay out her version of things. And I think she had to do it because Nathan Wade absolutely bundled this. So she took the stand, a very unusual move for a prosecutor. Her lawyers had been basically trying to get her not to take the stand. And finally, she's like, No, I'm going to come in and handle this. And she did handle it in a way. She really pushed back on a lot of the narratives that were being lofted. She did not benefit financially from this relationship. She says she always paid him back. She paid him back in cash. There were some eyebrows raised about, Why do you always pay in cash? She was like, I keep a lot of cash in my house. I'm not super surprised by that. Black people have a very tenuous relationship with traditional financial institutions. Mirsa Berderin, a NYU law graduate, law professor at UC Irvine, has written a great book on this, How the Other Half Banks.

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That didn't surprise me. But there were some people on Twitter who was like, Why do you have that much cash on hand? It's like, Dude, this is where different communities may have different norms around institutions that are common in society. But she really pushed back.

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I also appreciated her noting that Well, one reason she takes this money when she is traveling with a man or on a date with a man is women know they might sometimes need an escape plan, right? If things go south. And so that's why she had some of this cash on hand. I don't think I am usually a prosecutor stand, but there were moments in her testimony that were absolutely iconic. When she said, A man is not a plan. He is a companion. I mean, she did the thing. It's all I'm saying.

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And she also said, You are trying to make me a defendant. You know who's not a defendant here? Fannie Willis. Fannie Willis is not a defendant. Fannie Willis is not subject to 91 criminal charges.

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Right.

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Yes. Fannie Willis may have 91 problems, but a criminal charge ain't one.

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While we were recording, we got an update on the Trump civil case, or at least one of the Trump civil cases, and that is the one brought by Tish James that seeks various remedies from Donald Trump and people in his circle, the Trump organization for fraud.

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Can we counter this? Because we did just say, we're only talking about the criminal cases, and then you said, But what about the civil cases? And I said, no, no, you're right. We're just talking about the criminal case. I think we made this happen.

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You know, it's a very strong possibility. Maybe we are witches. Tish James.

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Did you just sit and think hard about $350 million?

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I declassified it with my mind first, and then I was like, I conjured it.

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And now everybody else gets to know about it. Yeah. Well.

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Well, so that was really the starting point. So the decision by Justice Engeron orders over $350 million in damages. But I think the figure will actually be even higher than that because it also orders the various defendants to pay interest on those funds dating back a few years, and that could push it to over $400 million dollars. The decision did not actually give Attorney General James everything she asked for, but that's still a huge amount of money. And when you add that to the Carroll verdict, I think we're about to find out a lot about Donald Trump's finances. Where's the money? Is he going to have it? Where's it going to come from? Et cetera.

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I think we may also find out why campaigns are so important and fundraising is so important.

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And taking over the RNC is so important, that too.

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Oh, my gosh. Yeah. So the decision bars Donald Trump from leading his organization and serving as an officer for three years, but not forever. The decision also notably reversed the court's earlier corporate death penalty, that is his order dissolving forcibly the Trump organization. Other The penalties were imposed on Trump's two adult sons, Don Jr. And Eric, as well as officers of the Trump organization. The decision also noted that the Trump family's, quote, complete lack of contrition and remorse border on pathological. Accurate. Gif. Probably have more to say about this ruling. But again, that was breaking news during our recording.

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What are we going to conjure next week, ladies?

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This man is not a plan. This man is definitely not a plan. Justice Engron, Ken.

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Roses are red, violets are blue. I have a judgment. How about you?

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Do you have $350 million, do you? So that sums up what we have, at least as of recording, for the Trump cases. So now we can go on to the preview.

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Go back to our regularly scheduled programming.

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Yeah, exactly.

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Correct. Okay. So what's up at SCOTUS this week? So let's preview some of the cases the court will hear oral argument this week. The first case that I wanted to highlight is actually several consolidated cases that are about an Environmental Protection Agency program that's designed to address pollution. And the principal case in the set of consolidated cases is called Ohio versus EPA. The court added these cases, which are actually several emergency applications to its regular merits docket, and it will now hear arguments on all of these applications. It's going to hear arguments on whether to stay the EPA's rule, which is at issue here. Before we get into the merits of this request and the nature of the rule, we wanted to note how basically unorthodox this is. So friend of the show, Steve Wladeck, has said that this is only the third time in 50 years that the court has heard arguments under circumstances like these. So this is a situation where no lower court has ruled that this EPA regulation is unlawful or illegal, so weird. The petitioners are asking the court in the first instance to block the challenged rule before there has actually been a judicial ruling on the regulation's ultimate validity.

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This might raise some standing questions about injury and other things, but why let justiciability get in the way of a good time? Again, while we think it is a good thing that the court is deigning to hear arguments on this quite audacious request and didn't just grant the requested stay application without argument, we shouldn't lose sight of the fact that this is still a really unorthodox and even audacious request here. Even with an argument, this is not how things are typically done. You don't challenge a ruling before the ruling has been judged to be impermissible or permissible. So there we are. Yeah.

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But on the merits, which it seems like the court is interested in diving into, the cases involve an EPA rule about smog and air pollution, and the rule is known as the Good Neighborbour Rule. It's called that because the rule is about precautions that upwind states have to take in order to protect downwind states. I wanted to call it the Pumba Rule, and it hurt that my friends never stood downwind. No, nothing?

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My kids would love that.

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So the core issue is simple, protecting us from breathing in pollution and also protecting the planet from the source of pollution that is a huge contributor to the climate crisis. But this simple issue involves a really complicated regulatory backdrop and litigation history. So the regulatory backdrop is the Clean Air Act requires states to produce a state-designed implementation plan. Sometimes that's called a SIP, in order to meet the EPA's goals. States submit their plans to the EPA for approval. If the state hasn't submitted a satisfactory plan, the EPA can adopt a federal plan, and the state has to abide by that federal plan.

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Okay, so that's what happened here. The EPA adopted a federal plan after it concluded that 23 states had failed to submit adequate plans to comply with the Ozone standards. Now comes the procedural complexity in this case. There was other litigation, not the litigation that resulted in this case, that challenged the EPA's initial disapproval of several states' plans. That litigation arose as follows. The EPA rejected certain state plans, and then the state sued in court, challenging the EPA's disapproval of their plans. This litigation, so the case that's before the Supreme Court now, arises out of other states' challenges to the EPA's federal regulations, that is the federal plan. But the other litigation challenging the disapproval of the state plans is in the mix. It's something that the challengers say is a relevant consideration to this litigation, which is, again, not about the original disapproval of the state plans, but the federal rule that the federal government adopted.

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The plaintiffs here, states and industry groups, are essentially challenging the federal plan on a number of different grounds. Some of their arguments against the federal plan relate to the challenges to the EPA's disapproval of the state implementation plan. So specifically, they say that the fact that courts have invalidated the EPA's disapproval of the state plan i. E, the stuff that happened in the other litigation, means that the federal plan at issue in this litigation is invalid. Though the courts invalidated the EPA's disapproval of those other state plans after the federal plan was created. But the EPA It also conceives that it can't apply its new federal rule to the states that successfully challenged the EPA's rejection of their plans because the new rule depends on the EPA's prior determination that the state plans were invalid. If you're catching the gist of this, all to say that it's a mess.

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The messy part really is about the interaction between the earlier conclusions about state plans and how that litigation interacts with this litigation. But there are also a set of cleaner, although bad, freestanding arguments, independent challenges to the EPA's federal rule that aren't about the disapproval of state plans. Basically, these plaintiffs say that the EPA didn't adequately consider a bunch of stuff, costs or compliance timelines, the amount of permissible emissions, regulation of with power plants and non-electricity-generating unit emissions, and basically that the EPA used a different and new methodology to evaluate plans. We have a bunch of swirling complicated arguments, a bunch of more familiar arguments that the usual The plaintiffs always trot out every time EPA tries to do any significant regulation to protect our lungs and the planet. In general, given the court's recent track record on environmental regulation, it's hard to feel super optimistic about this case. I think about cases like West Virginia versus EPA, which we've talked about. That's the Clean Power Plan case. Sacket versus EPA, which is about the Clean Water Act, Utility Error Regulation Group. That's the case that we haven't really talked about, but another environmental case.

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I think that the one takeaway from recent litigation is that the single greatest threat to planet Earth right now is the conservative supermajority of the Supreme Court. So I guess, please, please prove us wrong, justices.

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Kate, again, your optimism is just so sweet.

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Samalito is like, Burn it down.

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I mean, Kate, this case basically is like blank versus EPA. The EPA is going to lose.

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Like all the minutes we just spent explaining the complex background, litigation, regulatory, totally unnecessary. All you need to know is the caption.

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Sam Alido is like, I got a blank space, and I'll write your name, Ohio. So while the court is essentially making it unsafe for climate justice and environmental safety, It may actually turn a corner and make things a little better for consumer and civil plaintiffs rights. So there's another case on TAP for this sitting, and it's called Bissonet versus La Page, Bakery's Park. And the issue in this case is Who exactly is exempt from the Federal Arbitration Act? For those of you who don't know, the Federal Arbitration Act is a law that makes it very difficult for individuals to challenge arbitration agreements. And again, we're all subject to arbitration agreements, whether we know it or not. Sometimes when you click through for Apple or whatever or any number of different consumer contracts, you are actually subjecting yourself to arbitration as the method of adjudication for any claims that might will later arise. It's very difficult for individuals to challenge the nature of those arbitration agreements. Under the FAA, contracts of employment of semen, railroad employees, or any other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce are not subject to the Federal Arbitration Act.

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There has been a ton of litigation about what the any other class of workers language means. In this case, the Second Circuit said that in order to be a class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce, the workers had to be in what the Second Circuit called the transportation industry. That's in addition to being involved in foreign or interstate commerce. The plaintiffs here are commercial truck drivers who haul goods for flowers, foods, which manufactures wonder bread. The Second Circuit said, No, they're in the food industry, not the transportation industry.

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That's quite a white bread interpretation, I have to say.

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While the Supreme Court has been pretty into expansive readings of the Federal Arbitration Act, what the Second Circuit did here seems more than a little inconsistent with the Supreme Court's prior cases on this exemption. We could be headed for another rare win for plaintiffs in a Federal Arbitration Act case. We should note that the lawyer arguing for the plaintiffs in this case, Jennifer Bennett at Gupta Taylor, is the lawyer behind several of those other recent wins as well. We'll set the stage for this. The Supreme Court's earliest decision on this exemption, known as Circuit City, the Court said the exemption applied to, employment of transportation to workers, end quote, not to workers in a particular industry. Then one of the more recent cases in New Prime versus Oliveira, which is one of Jennifer Bennett's wins, the court, in a unanimous opinion by Justice Gorsuch, said the exemption applies to independent contractors as well as employees. We wanted to play some clips of Bennett's stellar argument in New Prime that helped secure this win. Here's one illustrating her mastery of the history and context of the Federal Arbitration Act, showing she really knows how to speak the justice's language.

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Again, we know that these statuts, in fact, were applied functionally. The historian's brief describes dozens of cases in which the Transportation Act was applied to independent contractors or people working for independent contractors. The second goal of the statute, as Circuit City explains, beyond these specific conflicts, is that Congress was concerned generally with transportation workers' role in the free flow of goods. The FAA was enacted in the wake of years of labor labor unrest in the transportation industry that had repeatedly shut down commerce. I want to note that this labor unrest, prime says that it was only common law employees of the railroads. That's in fact not true. The Shopman strike, which happened just before the FAA was passed, was caused in large part by workers who were not common law servants of the railroads that they were striking against.

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In another one of Bennett's wins, Southwest Airlines versus Saxon, she seems to have gotten the to really lay the groundwork for the theory, in this case, Bissonnet, which is that there's no freestanding requirements that workers be in the transportation industry as opposed to a group or class of workers who are engaged in transportation. Saxon, which was a unanimous opinion by Justice Thomas, said that the exemption applied to workers who load and unload cargo from airplanes.

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In Saxon, the court seemed to say that the availability of the exemption depends on the actual work done by plaintiffs or the class of workers to which the plaintiff belongs, not like generally what an employer does. The court defined class of workers as those who load and unload cargo on and off of airplanes. Here's a clip from that argument where Bennett lays out her theory of what the exemption means, which makes it clear, I think, that it would be available to this case as well, in addition to the airline workers that she was representing in Saxon.

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What's the narrower test if we decides to go that route?

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Sure. The narrower test would simply be a class of workers that is engaged, would be understood to be engaged in foreign or interstate commerce, which at the very least would be people who handle goods while they're in commerce. So anybody who handles goods while they're in transportation from the start of the transportation when they're given to the carrier to the end.

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We look forward to hearing, Jennifer Jennifer Bennett's argument in this case, we should note that what's especially impressive about her wins in the cases we just talked about, Newt Prime and Saxon, is that she won both cases as the respondent, that is, as the person who had already won in the lower courts. That's additionally impressive progressive because the Supreme Court often takes cases in part because they think the lower court messed up. So when you're a respondent, that is, you are defending a win below, it's sometimes an uphill battle, but she pulled it off in both of those cases.

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Another case we wanted to briefly mention that's on deck for this week is Corner Post, Inc. Versus Board of Governors of the Fed. This is a sleeper case involving when challenges have to be brought under the Administrative Procedure Act. Here, a business brought a lawsuit challenging a regulation regarding credit card swipe fees, but The regulation went into effect a long time ago and well before the company was in business. Here the lower court said, no, an APA challenge has to be brought within six years of the publication of the rule that you're challenging. But the company is arguing that, no, the statute of limitation publications actually doesn't start running until the impacted party, here them, is affected by the rule, even if that's way, way, way, years, decades after publication of the rule. Again, they lost below. But if they were successful in this argument, It might open the possibility of just tons of challenges being brought to old regulations. I think not so much because of this particular credit card regulation, but more broadly for the ability to challenge regulations writ large, we're going to keep a close eye on this argument and then ultimately the opinion in this case.

[00:34:17]

The court is also going to be hearing two big cases next week. We will talk about these cases in-depth when we recap the arguments, but we did want to put them on your radar because they are both really huge. One is a significant gun case, though it is not a Second Amendment case, about a federal restriction on what are called bump stocks. So this case is Garland versus Cargill, and it involves a challenge to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, interpretation of federal law that restricts machine guns. And ATF said that machine guns include bump stocks, which are devices that convert a semi-automatic rifle into something that can fire many, many, many, many many, many more bullets more quickly. Bump stocks were used in the mass shooting in Las Vegas, which is to date the deadliest mass shooting event in the United States. And so this case is about whether the federal government, under federal law has the authority to restrict the use of bump stocks. So again, we'll come back to this case more in-depth, but it's super important.

[00:35:24]

The ATF promulgated this rule in the wake of Las Vegas, so it's directly responsive to that mass shooting. And just going to say, I'm not really sure what the court is going to do about this because this layers on two pet issues of the conservative supermajority. The real enthusiasm for an expansive Second Amendment, although this is not a Second Amendment case per se, but it will certainly be talked about in those terms, plus the antipathy for the administrative state and the idea of the ATF, the politically appointed body, but with unelected unaccountable bureaucrats staffing it, making these kinds of regulations about people's real rights like the Second Amendment.

[00:36:06]

Although there might be a cross-cutting issue here because this was the Trump administration's ATF that did this bomb stock rule. So that could potentially cut across. Their hostility is obviously disproportionate.

[00:36:17]

This is going to be an interesting argument, I think. Yeah.

[00:36:19]

And just quickly, it's not a Second Amendment case. It's really just about whether the ATF had the power to interpret this ban on machine guns to include bomb stocks, which functionally convert guns that aren't otherwise machine guns into prohibited machine guns. And so the on-the-ground consequence is really important. The interpretive consequence is really important.

[00:36:36]

So the court is also going to be hearing a big pair of cases that are captioned under net choice. And these cases are challenges to Texas and Florida laws that really are attempted takeovers, government takeovers of social media. So both laws purported to have the government tell social media companies that they had to post certain content and that they could not restrict certain content even though the social media companies wanted to. So the cases are about whether such laws violate the social media company's first amendment rights. The court had previously stayed a lower court decision that had allowed one of these laws to go into effect. I think that's a pretty good indication that the court is likely to find these laws invalid. Should also note that, pairing up in the cases challenging these laws, we have both Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogger as well as Paul Clement arguing that these laws violate the First Amendment. So that combined with the court's previous ruling, I think the court will end up ruling against these laws. But again, we will turn to the arguments about them once the argument actually happens in the cases.

[00:37:45]

So there's lots going on at the court this week and next week. Of course, we did not go into everything. We will make sure to come back to some of these really important cases when we recap the oral argument. But for now, that's enough of an Amuseboosh to set you up for your Supreme Court listening for the next week or so. Leah, do you want to introduce our next segment?

[00:38:19]

We have our lengthy Court Culture segment where we are going to try to catch you up on everything, or at least some of the things that have been happening in other courts.

[00:38:30]

So this is the good, the bad, and the ugly of state courts. But first up, the good news. Don't worry, we will have plenty of time to get into the bad news. First up, some of the really good decisions. I think the kids are calling these baddies, bops, if you will. Let's talk a little bit about the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued an important decision on abortion and reproductive rights. The case involved the state's ban on Medicaid funds to cover abortion. Medicaid is the federal program that provides health care to indigent individuals. At the federal level, Medicaid funds cannot be used to fund abortions, and a number of states have followed by also limiting the use of their state Medicaid funds for abortion and other reproductive Services. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court did not invalidate that ban, but they did issue an important ruling that will shape how courts assess the challenge to the Medicaid restriction. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court said that the legal challenge to the Medicaid restrictions on abortion were governed by a very demanding standard of review, one that requires the state to come forward with a really important reason for restricting the use of state funds for abortion and to show that Other methods of achieving its goals would not suffice.

[00:39:48]

The justices on the court offered different reasons for why courts have to look closely at the Medicaid restriction and essentially require the state to really prove that the restriction is valid and necessary. So a It was a plurality held, and this is really important, that abortion is a fundamental right under the state constitution's right to privacy. But it was a plurality, not a majority. There are five justices, actually only five justices on the court now. But when the case comes back, depending on how the Pennsylvania state Supreme Court elections go, that plurality opinion could become a holding of the court. This is one of the many reasons to double down on state and local elections, including for courts. You can make an enormous difference and very, very quickly.

[00:40:27]

In 2025, three Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Supreme Court justices will each be on the ballot for an up or down retention vote, and that is in addition to the vacant seats to which additional justices will be appointed.

[00:40:42]

So by the time this gets back to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, if the elections go in a direction that those favoring reproductive rights would like, there may be more justices on this court who will be poised to make what is now a plurality ruling, a ruling of an actual majority.

[00:41:00]

When the case comes back, a majority of the court could also maybe hold that abortion bans discriminate on the basis of sex under the state constitution's Equal Rights Amendment. That was also reasoning offered in this case. That amendment prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex. And in that portion of the opinion, the court cited our own Melissa Murray's work. So that, too, could become an opinion of the court, depending on what happens in November.

[00:41:23]

This should be the campaign slogan, make Melissa Murray's work and views the law, right? Everyone can get around that. I love that.

[00:41:30]

Everyone can get around that. It will turn them out.

[00:41:32]

Exactly. Exactly.

[00:41:33]

Make the law great again.

[00:41:34]

Yes, exactly. So we assume that this Pennsylvania decision simply follows ineluctably from Sam Alido's suggestion in DOVs, that we return this issue to the states. You can hear Melissa's giggle because, of course, Pennsylvania came back with, Cool, abortion is a fundamental right, and abortion restrictions discriminate on the basis of sex, to which we can only imagine Sam Alido saying, Not like that. We wanted to give a tip of the to a listener for suggesting this imagined dialog, though in our minds, it's very real, between San Molito and the state of Pennsylvania.

[00:42:07]

Pennsylvania has gotten too woke for its own good, according to San Molito. We also wanted to highlight this, not just because these developments in Pennsylvania are cool, but because many of you have asked us in emails, sliding into our DMs, whatever, about the impact of the Equal Rights Amendment. So some of you have asked, if we pass the Equal Rights Amendment, would that be a way of limiting draconian abortion bans. We've been a little equivocal on this because we noted that the 14th Amendment, for example, was really limited by a conservative Supreme Court. And we posited that if the Equal Rights Amendment was to be ratified and made part of the Constitution. There are open questions about the ratification process at this point. This Supreme Court might not be the most amenable to a broad interpretation of an ERA. But we've also noted that the federal government and the federal constitution isn't the only entity that can think about equal rights and amending a charter to include more robust protections for equal rights. And indeed, many state constitutions have their own ERAs, and many more are incorporating ERAs into their constitutional text. Here's the real output.

[00:43:19]

We're seeing this at the state level, and it's really important. Again, a real way to preserve abortion rights in a landscape where abortion is becoming increasingly inaccessible.

[00:43:29]

But only if you have the right composition of state high courts. That is the big takeaway. Yeah.

[00:43:35]

Just to bring this home, this makes the upcoming Pennsylvania state Supreme Court elections all the more important. Last year's race for a vacancy on the court, it's got $20 million in spending. The race in 2025 is probably going to be even bigger, and now is the time to start getting involved.

[00:43:52]

Speaking of big, important, and in this case, really good state high court decisions, we wanted to highlight a decision that's really and really important from the Hawaii Supreme Court.

[00:44:02]

The Aloha state, and it's full of Aloha. Full of Aloha.

[00:44:07]

We are just plotting our return and have been really since we left. Here's another reason to be really excited about what is happening in Hawaii, and that is that Justice Edens issued an opinion concluding that under the Hawaii Constitution, and specifically the Second Amendment to the Hawaii Constitution, there's no state constitutional right to carry firearms in public. A lot of the reasoning in the opinion is about the history and traditions of Hawaii, including the fact that its constitution was ratified against a backdrop of a clear legal landscape where the Second Amendment did not provide rights to carry firearms in public. But it also focuses on the state's unique history and traditions, including law that protects all people, great and humble, and especially the vulnerable. Here I'm quoting from the opinion, The law imagines free movement without fear, living without need to carry a deadly weapon for self-defense. So just the crediting of countervailing constitutional values in debates about gun regulation that has been so absent from the Supreme Court and a lot of federal courts grappling with questions of gun rights, all of it on glorious display in this Edens' opinion.

[00:45:09]

Yeah. And it's especially, I think, meaningful to be recognizing this history in the wake of yet another mass shooting event in the country at the Kansas City Super Bowl parade commemorating the Kansas City Chiefs. This opinion by Justice Edens also quotes former Chief Justice Warren Berger's statement, which have played before on this podcast, that the very idea that the Second Amendment protects an individual right is, quote, one of the greatest pieces of fraud, I repeat the word fraud, on the American public by special interest groups that I've ever seen in my lifetime, end quote. Justice Eddins also quotes another piece by Melissa Murray, her keynote lecture that appears in the Houston Law Review, Children of Men: The Roberts Court's jurisprudence of Masculinity. So once again, state courts people make Melissa Murray's views the law.

[00:46:03]

Make the law great again. I don't think I've ever been cited next to Warren Berger. It feels illicit and thrilling, honestly. This is the Aloha spirit. Aloha, yes.

[00:46:12]

If you and Warren Berger are on the same page? What does that make the current US Supreme Court?

[00:46:18]

Good question. These are the questions. All right, so that's all the good/baddy states that we have to talk about. Now, let's really get into the bad the bad news, the bad news bears states. And first up is the sunshine state, Florida. Florida, as you know, is one of the states that may consider a ballot initiative that would protect reproductive freedom in state law and in the state constitution in the wake of Dobbs. This is especially important because Florida has been an access point and a haven for reproductive rights and access to abortion in a geographic region that has very quickly become a reproductive rights desert in the wake of Dobbs.

[00:47:03]

Florida's potential consideration of this Reproductive Rights Ballet initiative is part of a pattern of using state law and state constitutions to protect abortion rights in the wake of Dobbs. We've already seen this successfully happen in Michigan and Ohio, and Kansas, and elsewhere. It may be, we still have to see how signatures are gathered, but there may be similar ballot initiatives on the ballot in up to 14 states this coming November. This is an effort that is happening in many, many states. Not every state, because not every state allows it. But in most states where this is possible, there are people on the ground gathering signatures and trying to make it happen. But what's happening in Florida is this really troubling development that mirrors a troubling pattern we have seen emerge elsewhere as voters have tried to use real democracy to add protections for reproductive freedoms to state constitutions. And that is efforts to resist even putting these questions to the people in the first place.

[00:47:57]

Melissa and Kate wrote about this very dynamic in their recent Harvard Law Review article, Dobbs and Democracy. And the Florida Supreme Court heard a case that is about whether this ballot initiative will be allowed to actually get on the ballot. So some people are arguing that the language in the ballot initiative is allegedly misleading or that it violates other state rules about permissible ballot initiatives. And a Florida Supreme Court justice, the Chief Justice, decided that this is an opportunity to go all in on on fetal personhood.

[00:48:31]

And fetal personhood, if you're not fetal personhood forward, is just the idea that fetuses are, for purposes of constitutional law and statutory law, individuals entitled to rights. And on that logic, constitutions would therefore require abortion restrictions and prohibitions because they're essentially like homicide prohibitions or restrictions. So if we were to be fetal personhood forward, it would mean that legislatures couldn't actually protect abortion rights, regardless of ballot initiatives, regardless of measures that state legislatures take, because fetuses are persons imbued with certain rights that cannot be restricted by the state through the provision of certain services that are actually forms of homicide to the fetus. And so in this particular situation, the concept of fetal personhood is being used to potentially bar voters from enshrining abortion protections into the Florida State Constitution. And we'll play the clips in a second. But the chief justice's point here is that the ballot initiatives have to disclose whether they would alter other provisions in the state constitution. As the chief justice says, who is to say whether fetuses are in the state constitution? You haven't made it clear that this amendment might alter the status of fetuses in the state constitution, which, just so that we're all really clear, does not currently exist in the Florida Constitution.

[00:50:06]

So let's roll those clips.

[00:50:08]

Does the state have a position on whether an unborn child at any stage of pregnancy is covered by Article 1, Section 2, the basic rights provision? The reason I'm asking is we have a lot of precedent from the court saying that one of the things that summary has to do is identify the effect of any proposal on other constitutional provisions. It seems like it's self-evident that the proposal gives people notice that it's going to affect legislative power. But it seems like the issue of whether the unborn have any rights under Article 1, Section 2, independently of whatever is a matter of grace, the legislature legislature might want to do or as an exercise of legislative authority. It seems like this proposal assumes that the Constitution is currently silent on that issue. If that assumption is wrong, then it seems like it might have implications for what we need to do here. Right.

[00:51:19]

We just haven't taken a position on that, Your Honor.

[00:51:24]

If the bare minimum is that people need to be on notice as to what is the Constitution What does the Constitution do now and what are you proposing to change, can we evaluate that without taking a position on whether the current Constitution, legally, not morally or politically or whatever, but legally speaks to this issue of any rights for the unborn under this Declaration of Rights Provision? Let me ask you about this personhood issue. It assumes that the Constitution, as it exists right now, is silent as to as to any rights of the unborn. I don't know if that assumption is correct. I guess maybe a more direct question for you would be, can we say as a matter of law that the term all natural persons excludes unborn children.

[00:52:20]

All right, so as those clips make clear, this was really the thrust of his points during the argument. He wanted to press repeatedly this idea, fetuses are, or at least the state has to take a position on whether fetuses are rights-bearing entities under the Florida Constitution. We have highlighted rhetoric in this vein before, but it's approaching the two-year mark post-Obs, we may be in for the first judicial writing to explicitly endorse fetal personhood. That does seem possible. And yet, I don't want to overplay the importance of this rhetoric. I do think the people on the ground in Florida fighting for this initiative, including a former justice of the Florida Supreme Court, Barbara Perrienti, who I was on a panel with last week, do think that notwithstanding this rhetoric from the oral arguments, this will make it onto the ballot come November. There's still a high threshold to make it over. Florida law requires that an initiative like this command a 60%, not a simple a majority vote in order to go into the Florida Constitution. So that is a high hurdle. But there's at least a degree of optimism that notwithstanding this rhetoric, the Florida Court is not going to stand in the way of the Floridians actually deciding whether these protections should be in their Constitution.

[00:53:28]

Melissa said we were turning to the bad news, but this is actually we're zigzagging a little bit because I have a little bit of mixed news out of Wisconsin. I just wanted to highlight something. We often highlight oral arguments and opinions, but of course, a lot of things happen in the wake of opinions and in legislatures and law courts. I just wanted to highlight some developments in Wisconsin since the Wisconsin Supreme Court struck down the state legislative maps as violating the state constitution's requirement of contiguity. Okay, so maps are no good. Now there are a bunch of proposed maps out there. The Wisconsin legislature, after threatening to impeach Justice Janet and then backing down from that impeachment threat, has now passed into law the Democratic governor's map. Now the governor has to decide whether to sign that map into law or to veto it. If he vetoes it, that likely means that the Wisconsin Supreme Court would be in the position of choosing the state's legislative map. There are, as I said, a bunch of competing maps out there. There is one, the so-called Right Map, W-R-I-G-H-T, that actually seems like it has a chance of turning Wisconsin into a genuinely functioning democracy, which it has not been in recent cycles.

[00:54:39]

That is a state that translates majority will to election outcomes. If the governor signs this map, I am sure Wisconsin Republicans are going to challenge the map that the legislature just passed. If that happens, a three-judge court, a federal court with two members appointed by the conservative Seventh Circuit Judge, Diane Sykes, will decide about the legality of the map. But if the governor vetoes the legislatively passed map, there's a chance that the Wisconsin Supreme Court could adopt the right map and that it would go into effect. I know this is a little bit in the weeds, and whatever way this goes, I expect the Wisconsin GOP's scorched earth litigation tactics will continue, and they're going to try to get a court to strike down whatever the new map ends up being. But there is just a very technical but very high stakes fight happening on the ground in Wisconsin about the map right now. The results might really impact the face of democracy in November and going forward. So thanks for indulging something that is not really about a big court decision, but is about what happens after a big court decision and what could happen that might lead to another set of challenges in court decision.

[00:55:47]

I think we have to continue to keep our eye on Wisconsin.

[00:55:50]

Speaking of that good news or mixed news in Kate's case, let's move on to talk about what is happening in the federal courts of appeal. So first up, some questions about qualified immunity. And these questions come from one of the circuit courts that is a traditional favorite in this segment, Court Culture, and that, of course, is the Fifth Circuit.

[00:56:13]

Wait, one of or the favorite?

[00:56:15]

Well, I mean, favorite is a strong word, Kate. It comes up a lot. Don't know that it's a favorite.

[00:56:20]

It is the most frequent guest in this portion of the show, the Fifth Circuit. I think it is.

[00:56:25]

I think that's definitely right. Definitely.

[00:56:26]

But not necessarily a friend of the pod.

[00:56:29]

No. Favorite was probably the wrong word.

[00:56:32]

Hasn't reached that status just yet. So a few weeks ago, the Fifth Circuit issued an en banque decision, meaning all active judges participated in Villarreal versus City of Laredo. The case involves the Apparently, very difficult legal question of, Can the police arrest you for posting non-public, emotionally damaging information online?

[00:56:55]

Okay, so here are the facts. Villa Real posted on Facebook the name and occupation of a US border patrol employee who jumped off a public overpass and reported this as a suicide, which she corroborated with a local police officer. She also posted video feed of a fatal traffic accident, including the name of the deceased person. She had also corroborated that information with a local police officer. Then she ended up arrested under a state law that made it a crime to solicit information not yet officially made public for some benefit.

[00:57:25]

She later sued the officer saying that her arrest was unconstitutional because it penalizes her for speech. The Fifth Circuit said that the officers were entitled to qualified immunity, which is to say they cannot be sued for damages because it was not clear whether the Constitution allows police officers to arrest you for posting something that's not public online.

[00:57:49]

Every blog in the country would like a word, but okay.

[00:57:53]

This is what the Fifth Circuit said, We need not speculate whether Section 39.06(C) allegedly violates the First Amendment as applied to citizen journalists who solicit and receive nonpublic information. No controlling precedent gave the defendants fair notice that their conduct or this statute violates the Constitution facially or as applied to Villarreal. The Fifth Circuit, just to distill this, is so pro-free speech. Remember, some judges announced they wouldn't hire law clerks from schools they considered insufficiently protective of speech. They are so pro-free speech that they will allow you to be arrested for your speech.

[00:58:27]

Good times.

[00:58:28]

Again, in that Can't Stop, Won't Stop vibe that the Fifth Circuit is known for, it continues on its hustle elsewhere. We have previously covered the Supreme Court stay of the Fifth Circuit decision that allowed Texas to obstruct federal immigration officers who are attempting to do federal enforcement at the border. But that's not the only case in which at least a few judges on the Fifth Circuit are, shall we say, playing footsy with the idea that Texas can be secession curious, secession forward and interfere with federal sovereignty at the border. So the Fifth Circuit initially voted on Bonk 13 to 5 to temporarily halt a judge's plans for trial in the US suit against Texas over border buis in the Rio Grande River. Texas had put in border markers, but it's not allowed to do that. It's not allowed to set up obstacles in federal waters at the border. Or maybe they are, says the Fifth Circuit. Oral arguments in this case are expected in May 2024. But ultimately, the Fifth Circuit voted on banque to allow this trial to proceed while they hear this case on banque.

[00:59:40]

And five Fifth Circuit judges dissented from that ruling, allowing the case to proceed to trial. And in that dissent, they embraced Texas's theory that Texas is facing a invasion at the border of unauthorized migrants, and that Texas can, therefore, take over the border from the federal government. So the judges who joined this ruling were judges is Hoe, Smith, Engelhardt, Duncan, and Oldham, and they wrote, This case is about the fundamental right of self defense. But is it enumerated?

[01:00:09]

Is it in the text of the Constitution? I would like to know.

[01:00:13]

No, it's implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.

[01:00:16]

And history and tradition.

[01:00:17]

That Texas can nullify the federal government and federal officers enforcement of federal law.

[01:00:22]

So the Fifth Circuit, we're not done. We're not even close to done with the Fifth Circuit. In a previous episode, we talked about the SpaceX challenge, basically to the entirety of the edifice of labor law, the NLRB, the federal agency that enforces the labor law that SpaceX filed in Texas district Court. Since we last updated you, Amazon and also Trader Joe's have joined SpaceX in its It's been a potential challenge to all labor law, and the case has been transferred to a California district Court. The Fifth Circuit has a sad because it no longer gets to potentially invalidate all of labor law. It had to find another case to get back on its BS. We do Again, this is a little bit like Wisconsin. Some of this stuff is in the weeds, but it's really, really important to be aware of what's happening in the lower federal courts, not just because that affects what happens at the Supreme Court, but the lower courts, and in particular, the Fifth Circuit right now, this is the legal milieu that's now part of American life, and they're doing crazy, crazy stuff. The case arises out of a labor dispute.

[01:01:20]

During negotiations with the union, the employer made a last best and final offer, and one of the terms of that last best and final offer gave the employer the authority to make certain layoffs. Now, according to the NLRB, the employer made the layoffs after presenting the layoffs as a fait accompli under the terms of the last best and final offer, even as the employer ostensibly resumed negotiations. The NLRB basically said, This is an unfair labor practice under federal labor law.

[01:01:47]

Here, the Fifth Circuit is pretty sure that all of this is the union's fault, in that the union left the employer no choice. Here's one judge of the Fifth Circuit expressing that view. The judge refers to the The last best and final offer as the LFBO.

[01:02:03]

I don't understand how we can even...

[01:02:05]

Even if we wanted to entertain any of this stuff, it strikes me that we are bound to say there is no evidence of any fruitful negotiations prior to the implementation of Article 30 in the LBFO. And so the entire case hinges on whether they complied with Article 30 of the LBFO.

[01:02:22]

In plain English, this is a judge essentially saying that negotiations weren't going anywhere. So the employer could just do what the employer declared it wanted to do in its offer. So, yeah. And the judges were really giving the NLRB lawyer a hard time. So here's another clip. It did not notify the union at all. It waited till this 30-day deadline.

[01:02:44]

Well, you When you keep losing money at that rate, I mean, everybody ought to be preparing their bailouts. Well, fair enough. But leave aside common sense. They did get 30 days notice. The union got 30 days notice, and it didn't do anything.

[01:03:01]

Well, that's not true, Your Honor. Basically not. On August 20th- So the Fifth Circuit's version of truthiness is apparently just basically true. That basically true is the standard. It's good enough for government work, I guess. It's especially fine when you're placing the blame on unions and workers. So nothing to see here, folks.

[01:03:23]

Indeed. Now that I am in the safe space that is California, I thought we could talk some about my home circuit in the sixth Circuit. That's the Court of Appeals that covers the area where I live, Michigan, as well as Ohio, Tennessee, and Kentucky. And it is not a Court of Appeals to sleep on. So the sixth Circuit recently heard several big LGBTQ rights cases that could make their way to the US Supreme Court pretty soon. One of those cases involves a challenge to one of the rash of state laws trying to ban drag performances, this one out of Tennessee.

[01:03:59]

So the The Tennessee law at issue here bans a bunch of drag performances. A district court, and specifically a judge appointed by Donald Trump, invalidated the law, finding it over-broad, which it clearly is, and the state appealed that ruling. The state here is saying the drag performers don't have standing to challenge the law. It's a confusing argument, but they seem to be saying that maybe the law wouldn't apply to these drag performances or the law somehow is inexplicably just limited to locations where children would be allowed to see the performances, even though that is not in the law itself. But in addition to the standing argument, they are also saying that the law is constitutional, maybe with some court added limitations to solve different problems with the law.

[01:04:40]

We wanted to highlight a quick summary of some of the problems with the law that emerged in the oral argument where Melissa Stewart, a recent law school graduate and one of the lawyers representing the drag performers, explained why all of this is such a blunderbus effort and sweeps a lot of protected speech under the table and is therefore unconstitutional. Here's a clip.

[01:05:02]

Your Honor, even if this court were to adopt every single one of the state's narrowing constructions, this law would still run afoul of the First Amendment.

[01:05:11]

The panel here is two Republican appointees and a Democratic appointees. It's hard to say where this will shake out and how they will lean, but we will definitely be monitoring for any decision in this case and also what might happen next.

[01:05:25]

Okay, so sticking with the sixth Circuit, the court also heard a big case involving a challenge to a school district anti-bullying policy because that's where things have come to. This is another potentially significant First Amendment and LGBTQ rights case.

[01:05:37]

A group is challenging an Ohio School District's anti-bullying policy that the group says violates their free speech rights because it might require students in the school to refer to transgender and non-binary classmates by their correct pronouns. Here's a clip from the school district lawyer defending the policy. What I believe that plaintiff is seeking is essentially a carval, where all students are protected from harassment under that policy, except for transgender students who are harassed because they are transgender. That in itself would be a viewpoint discrimination perspective if the district protected everyone but transgender students. But again, this policy is designed specifically to protect all students. Apparently, some parents are now pushing a theory that under the First Amendment, bullying is actually good, at least when you're bullying trans kids. However, the panel seemed really skeptical of the challenge. We're going to be, again, watching for a decision here, and it seems really like this is the next wave of LGBTQ rights cases. It's really a set of cases that I think very soon will be at the court's door. That actually is really Really scary.

[01:07:01]

It is genuinely scary. Outside of the Courts of Appeals, we had an update relevant to district courts, and specifically, the country's chief scientist, who also happens to be a district court judge in Texas- Side hustle. You know we're talking about Matthew Casmiric. Okay, so this development pertains to Mifepristone, and specifically to a study that Matt Casmiric cited in support of his decision purporting to suspend the FDA's approval of Mifepristone. Guess what? A scientific publisher has retracted actually two studies that Casimirik relied upon in his decision purporting to suspend the FDA's approval of Mifepristone. I mean, it is a big deal for a scientific study, let alone two scientific studies, to be retracted. It happens just in time for SCOTAS to hear the Medication Abortion Challenge next month, and it does seem like a quite relevant development.

[01:07:53]

In other relevant developments, we've got word that one of our favorite justices was on the road in in the Golden State. Justice Sonia Sotomayor appeared at the University of California, Berkeley, and she made a few notable comments that we wanted to highlight. Let's roll the tape.

[01:08:10]

I live in frustration. And as you heard, every loss truly traumatizes me in my stomach and in my heart. But I have to get up the next morning and keep on fighting.

[01:08:28]

Yes, Sonia, we, too, live in frustration, and we also are truly traumatized. So we can get together and talk about it. Have a sister circle. But Justice Sotomayor refuses to be rooted in that despair. So she actually issued a call to action to the Berkeley students and audience. So here's that call.

[01:08:51]

How can you look at the heroes like Thurget Marshall, like the freedom fighters who went to lunch counters and got beat up to men like John Lewis who marched over a bridge and had his head busted open. How can you look at those people and say that you're entitled to despair? You're not. I'm not. Change never happens on its own. Change happens because people care about moving the arc of the universe towards justice. And it can take time, and it can take frustration.

[01:09:42]

I love this. Like, despair is not an option. And you have to get up and keep doing. And she does. And so we do, and all our listeners need to as well.

[01:09:50]

It's always a question of what you do with the hand you're dealt, right? And like, yeah, you've got a shitty hand, but that's the hand you've got. So finally, this is a little bit insider, but we are excited to share that we are continuing our partnership with Crooked Media. Hip hip, hooray. That means more content and a lot of other fun things, too. So be on the look out for some events, video content, and more. We're very appreciative of the team at Crooked, and of course, of all of you for showing up and caring and really making this possible. So as part of our continued partnership with Crooked, we're also going to have an opportunity to do some crossover content with Votesave America. To that end, we're excited to Welcome to the show, Shaniqa McClendon, Crooked's Vice President of Political Strategy. Hi, Shaniqa.

[01:10:35]

Hi. Thank you for having me.

[01:10:37]

Well, we're excited to have you. And for our listeners, it is only February, but November is going to be here before we know it. Shaniqa is here to fill us in on everything Votesave America is doing to help you all get ready for the election. First, Shaniqa, I think it's no secret that political fatigue is at an all-time high. Can you talk about what Votesave America is doing to inspire and mobilize people to take action in this critical election?

[01:11:00]

Yes. We just launched Road Save America, relaunched it a few weeks ago, and we have an action finder on the site, which we're really excited about. And literally, it's whatever you want to do. You check a few boxes to say, I want to sit on my couch and volunteer, or I'm willing to go outside, I'm willing to call people. And then you say where you want to go or where you live. And so it's like maybe you live in California or New York. And we take all of that information and serve the best options for you to volunteer. And there's actually a lot to do already On Tuesday, there was the New York 3 election to replace the seat that George Santos vacated, and our volunteers filled about 200 volunteer shifts for that. And so there's a lot of, as you know, abortion ballot measures that are either on the ballot or advocacy groups are working to get them on the ballot, and so they need help with collecting signatures and doing all those kinds of things. And then there's lots of primaries. So there's a lot to do, and you can go to the site and find that.

[01:12:00]

Shneiko, I like how you're so politic in your mention of George Santos, the seat he vacated, as opposed to, ceremoniously uprooted from. That is very true. But yes, I appreciate your generous spirit in recounting the George Santos debacle. But here's a question. We've heard that a lot of young voters are really motivated by state Supreme Court races, to which we say, yes, queen, exactly. Be super motivated by state Supreme Court races. And this is something we are covering a lot on strict scrutiny this year. Can you explain to us how vote Save America is capitalizing on this attention boom and really talking about state Supreme Court races?

[01:12:39]

Yeah. We've always made it a point to tell people that these were important races, but this year we're really prioritizing them as something that we're focused on. I think often people don't pay enough attention to the elections that are happening down the ballot, but now they are. And yeah, young people, I'm not going to say for whatever reason. It's an important reason. State Supreme Courts control a lot of things and make a lot of decisions on important policy, but have been really interested in these races. And I think we really saw that in Wisconsin last year with the State Supreme Court race, helping to get Janet Protosawitz elected out there. And Pennsylvania as well, a lot of young people showed up for those State Supreme Court races. And so there's more in Ohio and Michigan this year. And we think it's another thing we can point to for people to get excited about if they're not excited about other people who are on the ballot. And when thinking about abortion and how mobilizing that's been, state supreme courts play a role there. States start- A huge role. Yes. As states start passing these crazy laws.

[01:13:41]

And so that's why we're focused on it. And just generally, people should focus on it. The courts are important, and they've been dictating a lot of what's happening in our lives. And that's why Conservatives pack them.

[01:13:52]

So another question, Shniego, just to follow up. So you're super energized. You're a young person. You love state supreme courts. You're all in for these state supreme court races. Is there anything you can do besides getting your butt to the polls and voting in a state Supreme Court race? How else can we support Votesave America?

[01:14:08]

So something else that we're doing, we launched a program called the Anxiety Relief program. And pretty Pretty much, we launched this as a recurring donation program. We launched it so that, one, we could take anxiety out of the... Well, as much as we can out of our grassroots partners. Oftentimes, fundraising in general comes in really close to elections, which does not give people enough time to plan an entire election cycle so they can do the work that they need to do. So taking that stress off of our partners by having our audience members donate to this Anxiety Relief Fund. And so it's pretty simple. You can just go to our website and you pick the amount that feels good for you to donate every month. And every month, we send an email to the people who have signed up for that program, telling them where the money is going and what it's for. And I'm really excited about this. These are a lot of small organizations who just need resources to help scale their work. So that is another way that you can get involved.

[01:15:02]

It's like a crockpot, right? Basically, you just set it and forget it. You just set an amount that you're going to donate on a monthly basis, and you just let it ride. And then democracy is saved.

[01:15:13]

Exactly. You wake up the day after It's a good election day, and you know what you did.

[01:15:17]

And it really is a huge help to enable that long term planning. I know that strategy is part of what made a huge difference in shifting the composition in the Wisconsin Supreme Court, is encouraging people to got involved early to allow the party and candidates to plan over the long run how they were going to do what they ended up doing. So, yeah. Yeah. Shaniqa, thank you so much for joining us and letting listeners know how they can get involved this year.

[01:15:45]

Thank you. Thank you for having me.

[01:15:47]

Just to emphasize what Shaniqa just said, Votesave America just launched a new initiative to help streamline your political giving for the year. That's the Anxiety Relief program. Just donate what you can each month, and Votesave America will take care of distributing 100 % of your dollars where they're needed the most. So far, over 500 requiring donors have joined the program and trusted Votesave America to make their dollar go further, but there's still a long way to go. So head to votesaveamerica. Com to sign up now This was paid for by Votesave America, votesaveamerica. Com, not authorized by any candidate or candidates committee.

[01:16:26]

Strict Scrutiny is a cricket media production, hosted and executive produced by Leah Lippman, me, Melissa Murray, and Kate Shaw. It's produced and edited by Melody Rawell, with audio support from Kyle Segglen and Charlotte Landis, and music by Eddie Cooper. We get production support from Madelyne Haringer and Ari Schwartz. And if you haven't already, be sure to subscribe to Strict Scrutiny in your favorite podcast app so you never miss an episode. And if you want to help other people find the show, please rate and review us. It really helps. In a year as divisive as 2024, there's a lot to disagree about. But something we can all get behind is Jon Stewart's second term as host of The Daily Show. The late Night legend returns to the Comedy Central mainstay to share hilarious satirical takes on entertainment, politics, and so much more. The Daily Show, Ears Edition podcast offers daily episodes finetuned for your ears, along with the biggest headlines, exclusive extended interviews, and more. So listen to The Daily Show, Ears Edition, wherever you get your podcast.