The Supreme Court on Tuesday chose to put off until Friday at the earliest its reaction to the Trump Administration appeal seeking approval for its plan to end the “DACA” program that protects young undocumented immigrants from deportation. The case, involving the “Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals” program, is now scheduled for discussion at a… Read More
New Pennsylvania congressional map boosts Democrats
Claiming full authority to do so, a deeply divided Pennsylvania Supreme Court drew up and released on Monday its own new map of congressional election districts – one that experts calculated would give Democratic candidates a realistic chance of picking up three or more seats than they have been able to win in the past… Read More
The Supreme Court’s options on DACA
On Friday evening, the Supreme Court closed up shop for the holiday weekend without doing anything about DACA – that is, the Trump Administration’s appeal seeking review of its decision to shut down the program of “Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.” That program, in effect for well over five years, has allowed nearly 800,000 young… Read More
Trump immigration limits falter again in court
Using President Trump’s own words against him, a federal appeals court on Thursday added a second legal defeat for the White House’s latest attempt to bar the entry into the U.S. of people from six Muslim-majority nations. A divided U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled that the President’s purpose in issuing the… Read More
Second judge keeps DACA program going
Just days before the Supreme Court is to consider getting involved in the deepening controversy over the legal fate of nearly 700,000 undocumented immigrants who have grown up in this country, a second federal judge has ordered the Trump Administration not to end next month their protection against deportation. In a 55-page ruling Tuesday, U.S. District… Read More
Governor rejects new Pennsylvania voting map
Pennsylvania Governor Thomas W. Wolf told the state’s Supreme Court on Tuesday that a new Republican-drawn map of election districts for the 18-member Pennsylvania delegation in the U.S. House of Representatives does not satisfy the mandate of the state court to avoid partisan gerrymandering. Like the 2011 map that the state’s highest court struck down… Read More
Justices won’t take on new partisan gerrymander case
Continuing to work through a series of disputes on “partisan gerrymandering,” the Supreme Court refused on Tuesday to add a third case to its review of that issue in the current term. Over two Justices’ dissents, the Court refused to put on a fast track a case testing the constitutionality of a North Carolina congressional… Read More
New maps for Pennsylvania congressional voting clear hurdle
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s ruling striking down a state legislature’s district-defining map for this year’s congressional elections in the state cleared a potential legal hurdle Monday when Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito, Jr., refused to block that decision. Alito gave no reason for rejecting a postponement request by state GOP legislative leaders but his… Read More
The Supreme Court’s Election Clause dilemma
The Constitution has had an Elections Clause since it first went into effect in 1789, but the Supreme Court has rarely given an interpretation of its meaning. But what the Supreme Court has said creates a dilemma for the Justices as they decide soon what to do about the claim that Pennsylvania’s state legislature engaged… Read More
Justices speed up DACA case
With the controversy over young undocumented immigrants unfolding both in Congress and the federal courts, the Supreme Court agreed on Tuesday to put the case before it on a fast track. That may indicate that the Justices could be prepared to rule during their current term – unless Congress comes up first with a new… Read More