Wednesday round-up

Commentary on some of the Court’s recent orders and decisions continues. Yesterday’s round-up collected coverage of the cert. denial in Tuck-It-Away, Inc. v. N.Y. State Urban Development Corp., an eminent domain case involving Columbia University’s plans to expand its Manhattan campus. Subsequently, the Columbia Spectator published a report on the case, which a number of bloggers discuss. On her blog at the Atlantic, Megan McArdle laments the denial, complaining that it “reinforces the precedent of Kelo–that the government can take land and transfer it to private actors even when there’s only a trivial and dubious public gain involved.”  At the Volokh Conspiracy, Ilya Somin “share[s] McArdle’s frustration about the Court’s refusal to take the case.” Meanwhile, at Sentencing Law and Policy, Doug Berman discusses Tapia v. United States, one of Monday’s grants, and explains why he regards the case as “the sentencing sleeper of the current SCOTUS Term” and plans to “make a pitch for why [he] should be appointed to represent the decision below before SCOTUS.” Also, at PrawfsBlawg, Tun-Jen Chiang has a post on the “unanswered questions” left in the wake of the Court’s recent four-to-four split in the copyright case Costco v. Omega.

As Andrew also noted in yesterday’s round-up, Justice Scalia will help to launch Representative Michele Bachmann’s crash course on the Constitution for incoming members of Congress. Washington Post blogger Greg Sargent has confirmed with Supreme Court spokeswoman Kathy Arburg that Justice Scalia will speak about “separation of powers.” At Politico, Jennifer Epstein observes that “[i]t’s unusual for members of the high court to speak to small groups of lawmakers, but not unprecedented.” CBS News’s Political Hotsheet blog and Salon also have coverage of the announcement. 

Finally, speculation about how the health care reform law will fare at the Supreme Court proceeds apace. Perhaps unsurprisingly, journalists and commentators have focused on Justice Kennedy. Bloomberg’s Greg Stohr writes that Justice Kennedy “has signed opinions pointing in both directions” on congressional power, while the Wall Street Journal’s Jess Brevin predicts that “the pivotal votes likely belong to Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Anthony Kennedy.” And in an interview with Daniel Foster of the National Review Online, Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli says he is counting on Justice Kennedy’s vote in an eventual Supreme Court case. Meanwhile, in an attempt to illustrate what Justice Kennedy might do in the case, the editorial board of the Christian Science Monitor has drafted a mock opinion striking down the individual mandate.

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