Thursday round-up

At Reuters, Alison Frankel reports on the possible effects of recent tweets by President Donald Trump on his administration’s request that the Supreme Court reinstate a ban on entry into the U.S. by nationals of six Muslim-majority countries; ethics experts, she recounts, say that at best, “the solicitor general’s office can no longer argue that the president himself wanted the executive order only to pause immigration … temporarily so the U.S. can study its vetting procedures,” while “[a]t worst, the Justice Department could be subject to an ethics inquiry about whether its lawyers knowingly misrepresented facts in their Supreme Court filings.” At Lawfare, Alex Loomis suggests that “[l]ike it or not, the court may well consider the possibility that if it holds that ‘we won’t look beyond the text of the order’ …, President Trump will later admit on Twitter that the order was mere pretext.” In an op-ed in The New York Times, Linda Greenhouse remarks on the acting solicitor general’s assertion that courts should ignore campaign-trail comments because taking the oath of office marks a “’profound transition from private life to the nation’s highest office’”; Greenhouse argues that it is “the very absence of such a ‘profound transition’ in President Trump’s behavior that increasingly concerns his critics and even some close allies.”

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