Tuesday round-up

Yesterday the Supreme Court issued additional orders from the justices’ private conference last Friday, adding no new cases to their merits docket. Amy Howe covers the order list for this blog, in a post that first appeared at Howe on the Court. Todd Ruger reports at Roll Call (via How Appealing) that the court “officially wiped out a lower court ruling from April that had struck down Michigan’s congressional map as giving an unconstitutional boost to Republicans,” a move that “was expected, since the justices decided in June that federal courts can’t rein in politicians who draw political maps to entrench a partisan advantage.” At US News & World Report, Lisa Hagen reports that “[e]arlier this month, the Supreme Court tossed a similar challenge in Ohio, where a lower court struck down the state’s congressional districts drawn by the Republican-led legislature.”

For USA Today, Craig Gilbert and Richard Wolf report that “a new and wide-ranging national survey about the court by the Marquette University Law School … offers a sweeping snapshot of public perceptions of the court, its individual justices, its role, major rulings it has handed down and issues it could soon decide.” At Bloomberg Law, Kimberly Robinson reports that “57% of adults surveyed said the judiciary was the most trusted branch,” but “Republicans had a higher confidence level in the Supreme Court overall.”

In the latest episode of Strict Scrutiny (podcast), the hosts and guest Jay Austin “recap the Title VII arguments (which means a lot of bathroom talk).” Tonja Jacobi and Matthew Sag analyze the arguments at SCOTUS OA.

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