Tuesday round-up

The Supreme Court on Monday rejected a request by House Democrats to speed up the process for the lower courts to start re-evaluating the congressional efforts to obtain President Donald Trump’s financial records. Amy Howe reports for SCOTUSblog – in a story first published at Howe on the Court – that the high court’s decision is a minor victory for the president because it means more delays before the litigation continues in light of the July 9 ruling in Trump v. Mazars. As Pete Williams of NBC News notes, the justices took a different approach with regard to a Manhattan grand jury’s subpoena for Trump’s financial records; last week, the court allowed that case to head back to a lower court on an expedited basis. Jess Bravin of the Wall Street Journal reports that the court’s decision on Monday in the congressional case “further dim[s] Democratic hopes that congressional investigators could obtain the materials prior to November’s election.”

In news relating to the other side of the Capitol, CNN’s Ted Barrett and Manu Raju report that “Senate Republican leaders, undeterred by the scathing criticism leveled against them for blocking President Barack Obama’s election-year Supreme Court nominee in 2016, are signaling that they are prepared to confirm a nominee by President Donald Trump even if that vacancy occurred after this year’s election.”

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