Monday round-up

The Affordable Care Act’s path to the Supreme Court continues to generate discussion and commentary. (The ACA was also the subject of a symposium on this blog). Writing for the Los Angeles Times, David Savage describes the decision facing the Obama Administration – whether to seek en banc review of the Eleventh Circuit’s decision striking down the individual mandate as unconstitutional or to instead seek Supreme Court review directly – as carrying a “high political risk.” The York Daily Record examines the prospect that Goudy-Bachman v. Department of Health and Human Services, in which a federal judge from the Middle District of Pennsylvania struck down the ACA’s individual mandate, could reach the Court. (Hat tip to Howard Bashman of How Appealing for this link.) Finally, writing at Verdict, Michael Dorf argues that although litigation over the ACA is likely to produce “the most closely watched case” of the coming Term, it “actually presents a relatively unimportant constitutional question” and is significant primarily in “the realms of politics and policy.”

The execution of Troy Davis last Wednesday prompted more debate over the weekend about the Court’s role in executions. Responding to criticism by Dahlia Lithwick and Lisa McElroy in the New York Times (which Kiera covered in Friday’s round-up), Kent Scheidegger countered at Crime and Consequences that “[u]nexplained denials are, of course, standard operating procedure at the discretionary review stage.” The editorial board of the New York Times cites the Davis case as an example of how the Court has failed to create procedures that render the death penalty constitutionally permissible. But Kenneth Jost contends at Jost on Justice that the case for Troy Davis’s actual innocence is ultimately unpersuasive.

Justices Scalia and Kagan also drew coverage this past weekend. On Saturday, Justice Scalia delivered a speech at Duquesne University in which he argued for the importance of moral judgment in higher education; the Pittsburgh-Gazette and Pittsburgh Tribune-Review both have coverage. Writing in the Washington Post, Robert Barnes surveys Justice Kagan’s first year on the Court, observing that although she “came to the bench as something of a mystery,” the Justice now stands out as a “conversational, confident writer, at times as sarcastic and cutting as a veteran.”

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Posted in: Round-up

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