Tuesday round-up

Yesterday North Carolina asked the Supreme Court to step into the dispute over its 2013 election law and allow it to use several provisions of that law – including a requirement that voters present a photo ID – in the November 2016 elections.  I covered the request at my blog, with other coverage coming from Lyle Denniston at his blog, Josh Gerstein of Politico, and Robert Barnes of The Washington Post, and commentary from Rick Hasen at his Election Law Blog.

Elsewhere at his eponymous blog, Lyle Denniston reports that the full Ninth Circuit has declined to weigh in on the constitutionality of California’s gun control laws, raising the possibility that the dispute could move on to the Supreme Court; other coverage comes from Bob Egelko of SFGate.

In The Washington Post, Mike DeBonis reports on the role that the Supreme Court and the nomination of Chief Judge Merrick Garland have played in the presidential campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump and “some emerging evidence that Clinton would stand firm on Garland should she win.”  Edward-Isaac Dovere and Burgess Everett of Politico similarly report that “[t]op Senate Democrats are pushing Hillary Clinton to renominate Merrick Garland for the Supreme Court, a move party strategists argue would give her an early advantage against Republicans if she wins the presidency.”

Briefly:

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