Friday round-up

Lawrence Hurley reports at Reuters that “[t]he Senate Judiciary Committee’s Republican chairman [Chuck Grassley] said on Thursday any Supreme Court justice considering retirement from the lifetime job should announce immediately so a successor can be confirmed before the November U.S. midterm election.” Eric Levitz discusses Grassley’s comments at New York magazine’s Daily Intelligencer blog.

The solicitor general’s letter to the court correcting a statement he made at oral argument in Trump v. Hawaii continues to attract comment. At Take Care, Leah Litman maintains that the “reasons to be skeptical of the Solicitor General’s claim that the president made ‘crystal clear’ that he had no intention of imposing a Muslim ban” “include statements that the President made after his purported disavowal, as well as statements that he (and other members of his administration) made after the Supreme Court argument itself,” raising “the possibility that the President or his administration would make post-decision statements about the entry ban.” At The Economist’s Democracy in America blog, Steven Mazie suggests that “the post-hearing rumpus shows that if the Supreme Court upholds the president’s proclamation when it hands down its judgment in June, it will do so without any assurances that the policy is far removed from a most incendiary campaign promise.”

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