Lyle Denniston

May 4 2015

Compensation for wartime wrongs?

Retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, borrowing an idea from the belated government effort to make up for holding loyal Japanese-Americans in prison camps during World War II, on Monday proposed a similar approach to wrongs committed by government officials in carrying out the “war on terrorism.”

Apr 26 2015

Same-sex marriage: The decisive questions

This post also appears on scotusblog.com Twenty-two months ago, the Supreme Court — perhaps not fully realizing that it was doing so — set off a constitutional revolution.  In a decision that spoke somewhat tentatively about an “evolving understanding of the meaning of equality,” the Court in United States v. Windsor saw in that understanding… Read More

Apr 14 2015

Preview on same-sex marriage — Part II, The states’ views

This post also appears on scotusblog.com This is the second post in a four-part series on the written arguments that have been filed in the same-sex marriage cases at the Supreme Court.  This post covers the briefs of the four states in defense of their state bans.  America’s state governments have never seen anything like… Read More

Apr 13 2015

Preview on same-sex marriage — Part I, The couples’ views

This post also appears on scotusblog.com This is the first post in a four-part series on the written arguments that have been filed in the same-sex marriage cases at the Supreme Court.  This post covers the briefs of the couples who are challenging the state bans.   Later posts in this series will cover the state governments’… Read More

Apr 9 2015

Federal judge threatens to end new immigration policy

NOTE TO READERS: The following post catches up with developments while the writer was necessarily away from work this week. The federal judge in Texas who is handling the claim of 26 states that the Obama administraiton’s new deferred-deportation policy is illegal threatened this week to strike down that policy altogether, even without holding a full trial.

Apr 2 2015

Who has a right to speak up in the Supreme Court?

Reprinted from Constitution Daily, the post of the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.  The post is by Lyle Denniston Staging a verbal protest inside the Supreme Court’s chamber when the Justices are in session is not, constitutionally speaking, as serious an offense as shouting fire in a crowded theater – the classic illustration that the… Read More

Mar 31 2015

Lawyers for same-sex marriage plea named

This post also appears on scotusblog.com.  Lyle Denniston is the author. Under gentle pressure from the Supreme Court not to split up the argument on single questions, the legal teams supporting same-sex marriage have settled on one lawyer to present each issue.  The teams thus have abandoned their earlier request to let four lawyers appear… Read More

Mar 26 2015

Is the Supreme Court promoting race bias in election districting?

Reprinted from Constitution Daily, the blog of the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.  This post is by Lyle Denniston. No one doubts that, at least since the 14th Amendment was put into the Constitution in 1868, states have been forbidden to discriminate on the basis of race in public policy. In modern times, however, America… Read More

Mar 24 2015

Have voter ID laws survived a new round of challenges?

Reprinted from Constitution Daily, the blog of the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia.  Post by Lyle Denniston. Few constitutional issues over the right to vote divide the nation’s two dominant political parties more deeply than the question of whether elections would be fairer if every voter had to show a photo ID before casting a… Read More

Mar 20 2015

Puerto Rico ends defense of same-sex marriage ban

The government of Puerto Rico on Friday ended its defense in federal court of the territory’s ban on same-sex marriage  The change in position was announced by commonwealth officials in San Juan, and was confirmed in a legal brief filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.  Five same-sex couples have a challenge to the ban… Read More

Lyle Denniston continues to write about the U.S. Supreme Court, although he “retired” at the end of 2019 following more than six decades on that news beat. He was there for three revolutions – civil rights, women’s rights, and gay rights – and the start of a fourth, on transgender rights. His career of following the law began at the Otoe County Courthouse in his hometown, Nebraska City, Nebraska, in the fall of 1948. His online, eight-week, college-level course – “The Supreme Court and American Politics” – is available from the University of Baltimore Law School, and it is free.

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