Tuesday round-up

For the Associated Press, Lisa Mascaro reports that “[l]ate last week, Democrats lost ground in their fight to unearth some 1 million documents related to [Supreme Court nominee Brett] Kavanaugh’s time as staff secretary at the Bush White House, a three-year stint on his resume that Republicans say is irrelevant to his qualifications for the court.” Additional coverage comes from Jimmy Hoover and Michael Macagnone at Law360 (subscription required), who report that the Democrats’ chances of accessing the documents “plummeted after the National Archives confirmed that such requests could only come from Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.”

At First Mondays (podcast), Dan Epps and Ian Samuel “round up the latest Kavanaugh news, including speculation on the Bush documents and a debate over whether Democrats should support his confirmation when they disapprove on the merits.” In an op-ed for The Hill, Ken Blackwell maintains that Kavanaugh’s nomination is “great news for Americans concerned about protecting religious freedom and making sure administrative agencies stay within the realm of their legal authority.” In an op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, Joshua Gelzer cautions those worried about Kavanaugh’s views on the “administrative state” against confusing “the demise of a doctrine of statutory interpretation with the demise of the regulatory and administrative agencies themselves.”

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