Lyle Denniston

Jul 5 2019

Judge moves ahead on race bias issue on 2020 census

Resisting efforts by the Trump Administration to take full control of the continuing controversy over the 2020 census, a federal trial judge in Maryland on Friday moved forward on a faster-than-usual schedule to decide whether the plan to ask everyone in America about their citizenship was motivated by racial bias. Wasting no time after Administration… Read More

Jul 3 2019

President still wants citizenship question on census

Overruling two of his Cabinet departments, President Trump demanded on Wednesday that everyone in America be asked about their citizenship as part of the 2020 census. Less than 24 hours after his Administration had declared that the controversy was over, with census forms going to the printers without that question, the President used a tweet… Read More

Jul 2 2019

It’s final: no citizenship question on 2020 census

In a decision that seems sure to have a significant impact on American politics over the coming decade, the Trump Administration decided on Tuesday to carry out the 2020 census without asking everyone in the nation about their citizenship. The question, if asked, was likely to reduce the political power of larger states in future… Read More

Apr 16 2019

Another major setback for war crimes courts

In a stark new illustration of the seemingly never-ending troubles of the system of war crimes courts at Guantanamo Bay, a federal civilian court on Tuesday nullified nearly 500 orders that had been issued by a military judge there because of ethical lapses. The ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals… Read More

Mar 26 2019

Pentagon now free to enforce transgender-in-military limits

The Pentagon on Tuesday afternoon gained clear and definite legal permission to impose significant new limitations on military service for transgender individuals, under a new policy that is set to formally begin in 17 days — on April 12.   With the legality of the new restrictions still not decisively settled in any federal court, the… Read More

Mar 20 2019

New plea to go ahead with transgender-in-military policy (UPDATED)

The Trump Administration has now filed its request to the appeals court, the D.C. Circuit, to “take all appropriate steps” to enable the Pentagon to go ahead with enforcing its new transgender policy.  The request sought one of three alternatives: to clarify that a federal judge’s order barring the policy is no longer in effect,… Read More

Mar 19 2019

Judge again blocks limits on transgender service members

The Trump Administration remains legally barred from putting into effect its strict new limits on transgender individuals continuing to serve in the military or enlisting anew, a federal judge in Washington, D.C., ruled on Tuesday.   It will not be free to do so at least until March 29, the judge said.  Under normal court procedures,… Read More

Mar 15 2019

Supreme Court broadens review of census dispute

The Supreme Court on Friday broadened the scope of its review of the legality of adding a question about citizenship to next year’s census, telling lawyers to add their views on whether that move would be unconstitutional. The case up to now has been only a test of whether asking everyone in America about their… Read More

Mar 13 2019

Despite ongoing court dispute, Pentagon moves on transgender limits

Without waiting for the courts to decide if it can do so legally, the Trump Administration has issued orders to put into effect next month its strict new limitations on service in the military by transgender individuals. The policy will affect those already in uniform as well as those seeking to enlist. On Tuesday night,… Read More

Mar 8 2019

Pentagon to put transgender restrictions into effect (UPDATED)

(Later on Friday, the Trump Administration filed a document with the federal judge in Washington, D.C.., explaining why it understood that it was no longer barred from carrying out the policy.  That filing can be read here.  Transgender rights groups plan to challenge that point.) Taking the position that it is now legally free to… 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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