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United States News Title: SCOTUS To Lower Courts On The Travel Ban: Knock It Off The U.S. Supreme Court appears somewhat irritated with federal courts that have repeatedly barred the Trump administration from enforcing immigration policies halting the entry of certain classes of migrants and refugees. The high courts latest orders sent three clear signals to lower courts, all of which are positive signs for President Donald Trump. First, the Supreme Court is quite clearly expressing its view that the government will prevail on the merits of this dispute. The Court would not grant an application with these facts if a majority of the justices did not believe the administration will ultimately be vindicated. As such, the orders appear to be a signal to the 4th and 9th U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeal, two venues currently adjudicating travel ban challenges proceed prudently, and with sufficient respect for the presumption that the administration is acting in good faith. Secondly, the Court, for the most part, spoke as an institution. The order was forthright and terse, suggesting the Court sees little ambiguity in this case. The sober style means to communicate decisiveness, competence and the sense that the Court is conducting its business without dramatics, unlike the rest of the government. Whats more, just two of the nine justices registered their dissent. Given these facts, it appears the justices are doing their best to speak as a Court and not as an amalgamation of nine separate jurists. Third, the order instructs the 4th and 9th Circuits to render [their] decision with appropriate dispatch. This language is highly unusual in a Supreme Court order. It seems to suggest that the justices plan to take the case themselves, and dispose of it as quickly as possible. Timing is especially relevant here. The Courts current term ends in June, leaving just six months from this writing for briefing, argument, and deliberation. All told, the coalition of civil rights groups and Democratic attorneys general fighting the latest iteration of Trumps travel restrictions would seem to have trouble ahead of them. The 9th Circuit will hear a travel ban challenge Wednesday, and the 4th Circuit will hear a second challenge Friday. Decisions are expected before the end of the year. Poster Comment: I don't think anything other than a final ruling by the SC will make one bit of difference in the liberal activist lower courts. They're likely to just keep ruling against Trump just to throw more monkey wrenches into the works, until the SC finally does get around to actually hearing the case and ruling. It's pretty obvious that the liberal moonbat judges don't care if they're overturned - if they did, it wouldn't happen so incredibly often. We DESPERATELY need a law which removes any judge who gets overturned more than some small percentage of the time. Exactly where a reasonable line that way would be, I don't know - but the statistics are surely available to be able to figure it out and start removing maybe the worst 10% or something on a very regular basis at the end of each year or something along those lines. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: IbJensen (#0)
Nah. We need a ruling whereby a federal law or an executive order remain in effect until the U.S. Supreme Court rules. It can still be challenged in the lowers courts, and those courts can rule on the law, but they can't stop it. They can only refer the issue to the U.S. Supreme Court. It's ridiculous that some 3-judge panel on the 9th circuit can affect our federal immigration and refugee laws.
I agree. Who would be appointed to keep track of all these robed activists?
Liberals are like Slinkys. They're good for nothing, but somehow they bring a smile to your face as you shove them down the stairs.
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