Monday round-up

On Friday evening, the Supreme Court granted the Trump administration’s request to block a lower-court order that had prevented the government from spending $2.6 billion in Pentagon funds for construction of part of a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border. Amy Howe has this blog’s coverage, which first appeared at Howe on the Court. For The Wall Street Journal, Jess Bravin and others report that “[t]he Supreme Court order … split the court along its conservative-liberal divide.” Robert Barnes reports for The Washington Post that “[t]he court’s conservatives set aside a lower-court ruling for the Sierra Club and a coalition of border communities that said reallocating Defense Department money would violate federal law.” Kenneth Jost maintains at Jost on Justice that the ruling “allow[s] the Trump administration to violate the text and spirit of the Constitution,” “openly flout[ing] Congress’s constitutional control over federal spending.” For this blog, Steve Vladeck explains that “the decision is part of a larger, emerging trend … in which the solicitor general has been unusually aggressive in seeking emergency or extraordinary relief from the justices, and the court, or at least a majority thereof, has largely acquiesced.”

Briefly:

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