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One Grudging Cheer and Multiple Emphatic Jeers for Trump v. Slaughter

Given the Court's failure to grant interim relief and its per curiam opinion last year in Trump v. Wilcox , the ruling today in Trump v. Slaughter cannot have come as a surprise to anyone paying even the slightest bit of attention. That is not to say that Slaughter will be anything but a disaster. By invalidating removal restrictions for the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and nearly every other hitherto independent agency,  the Court has backed the ongoing onslaught of political cronyism as against professional government. The decision would be harmful under any circumstances. It is all the more so now, when the particular president empowered to remove members of independent agencies without cause is a corrupt, vindictive narcissist whose preferred replacements for subject-area experts are sycophantic ignoramuses. Having said that, I will give the conservative super-majority who signed onto the Chief Justice's opinion in Slaughter a little bit of credit. They had the decency ...

SCOTUS End-of-Term Opinions Today: Blog Post Coming This Afternoon

Good morning! This morning the Supreme Court will hand down opinions in some or all of the merits cases remaining on this docket from the OT 2025 Term. We await rulings in: Trump v. Barbara (birthright citizenship). I blogged about the case here and here . Prof Krishnamurthi blogged about it here . I also hosted a guest post on the case from Profs Scott Titshaw and Stephen Yale-Loehr. And I wrote a Verdict column about the policy stakes. Trump v. Slaughter (independent agencies). I blogged about this case before and again after the oral argument. Trump v. Cook (pretextual firing of Fed Governor Lisa Cook). I addressed some of the issues at stake back in August of last year. I took a deep dive into whether the Fed is really distinguishable from other independent agencies just before the oral argument. Little v. Hecox and W. Va. v. B.P.J. (transgender athletes). I filed a brief  (as co-counsel and as an amicus party) in support of the trans athletes in these cases. I p...

The Insanity and Incoherence of the Bruen Test for Second Amendment Cases

Reasonable people can disagree over whether the Constitution as a whole protects an individual right to own guns apart from militia service. Although the Supreme Court has misread text and distorted history to locate that right in the Second Amendment, which only applies to militia service, such a right could be created by reasonable judicial interpretations of the Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments. After all, the Court has recognized an array of fundamental unenumerated rights, such as the right of competent adults to refuse medical treatment, and Americans have prized their guns for centuries in ways that might suggest judicial protection for such a right. Reasonable people can also disagree in many cases involving gun laws over whether the right is burdened in ways that are not justified by the reasons supporting the law. The virtually complete ban on handguns in District of Columbia v. Heller , for example, might be such a law. But the Supreme Court’s decision in New York State ...

What Weight, If Any, Should Be Given Racist Laws In A History-and-Tradition Test?

In Wolford v. Lopez , Justice Alito wrote an opinion for a 6-3 Court, holding that a Hawaii law that requires express consent from the owner of private property otherwise open to the public to bring a firearm onto the private property violates the Second Amendment as made applicable to the states via the Fourteenth Amendment. Much of the dispute followed a familiar pattern in ideologically divisive Second Amendment cases. The conservatives invoked history and tradition to say that the challenged law is an impermissible innovation; the liberals objected to the test but said that even applying it, the law should be upheld. Beyond the usual back-and-forth, Justice Jackson, dissenting for herself and Justice Sotomayor, chastised the majority for considering history and tradition only at step 2 of the Bruen   test. The logic of originalism, she said, would make the question whether Hawaii's law even infringed Second Amendment rights subject to an inquiry into the original understanding...

Does the Most Favored Nation Approach to Religious Discrimination Apply in Prison?

Yesterday, the Supreme Court held that the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) cannot be the basis for a lawsuit for money damages against state prison officials who blatantly violate it because, according to the 6-3 majority opinion of Justice Gorsuch, laws enacted pursuant to the Spending Clause cannot authorize liability against people who are not the recipients of federal funding. Louisiana, the Court said, took the federal money and thus subjected itself to RLUIPA, but the officers did not. As a consequence, petitioner Damon Landor was left without a remedy against the officers who shaved his head in violation of RLUIPA, even after they were clearly informed that doing so would violate Landor's sincere Rastafarian beliefs.  In my latest Verdict column , I offer three reasons why the holding in Landor v. Louisiana Dept of Corrections and Public Safety   is problematic. The first two track arguments made by Justice Jackson (joined by Justices ...

The Most Deranged Non-Argument of All: Attack the Person

Participating in politics never has been, is not now, and indeed must never involve engaging with others solely on the grounds of pure reason.  Emotion matters, evidence matters, and we have seen to our horror what can happen when those who pretend to rely on cold, supposedly objective reason get their hands on the levers of power. For most of the last few decades, however, I have been remarking on the notable decline in standards in US politics regarding what counts as an argument.  Reason is not at all sufficient, but it certainly is necessary.  And although Democrats offer more than the occasional example of forehead-slapping silliness, there is emphatically no equivalence between the two parties. Long before Donald Trump came along, Republicans had decided that "message discipline" was more important than the message itself.  Rote repetition of talking points became their standard operating procedure, no matter what any reporter or political opponent might do to ...

Iran War Hawks Are Rightly Unhappy With U.S. Concessions to Iran But Willfully Blind to their Role in Giving Iran the Leverage that led to Them

Just over a week ago, President Trump described the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Iran that at that point had not yet been made public as "achiev[ing] everything we set out to accomplish - everything, and much more. Ending the current conflict, reopening the Strait of Hormuz and preventing Iran from ever obtaining a nuclear weapon." It was obvious that that statement was false when Trump made it. The various stated goals of the war the U.S. and Israel launched against Iran included regime change and eliminating the threat posed by Iran's nuclear and missile programs. "Ending the current conflict" was not one of the original goals because there was no direct military conflict before the war began. Nor was opening (or reopening) the Strait of Hormuz because it was open before the war.  Now that the MoU's full text is publicly available , it is even more obvious that the U.S. achieved none of Trump's objectives. Consider the MoU's declaration...

Juneteenth!!

For some reason, the White House is not hosting a raucous Juneteenth celebration today.  Strange. We at Dorf on Law chose not to put a bouncy house on our virtual front lawn, instead commemorating one of the country’s most important dates quietly and respectfully. We wish all of our readers peace and justice. - Neil H. Buchanan

Rare Unanimity of Result in a SCOTUS Second Amendment Case

Today's Supreme Court decision in United States v. Hemani is interesting for multiple reasons. (1) It is the first Second Amendment case on the Court's plenary docket in which the judgment was unanimous. Caetano v. Massachusetts was unanimous but was a per curiam GVR (grant, vacate, and remand), not a case in which there was full briefing and oral argument. (2) The unanimity is readily explained: at least as applied to the facts of this case, the underlying law at issue in Hemani is almost as stupid as the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court's decision in Caetano. That court said that stun guns are not protected "arms" within the meaning of the Second Amendment based on reasons that pretty obviously contradicted the mode of analysis required by Dist. of Columbia v. Heller . The law at issue in Hemani,  18 U.S.C. § 922 (g)(3), criminalizes firearm possession by anyone "who is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance." Hemani, fully co...

The Irrationality of Markets (on Steroids)

With almost no time to write today, I did want to comment briefly (albeit mostly via other writers) on the current madness in US financial markets.  In case anyone has missed it, several huge companies are “going public” this summer, which will make the superrich superricher.  The first such market splash has been playing out for the last few days. None of it makes sense, but that should surprise no one.  Here are a few examples of sane analyses of the financial markets' recent insanity. (1)  Hype and Glory: The SpaceX frenzy continues , Paul Krugman, June 17, 2026, an excellent analysis that demonstrates that SpaceX's financial "fundamentals" are completely insane.  Krugman includes this gem: Robin Wigglesworth, editor of the Financial Times blog Alphaville , memorably described Elon Musk’s company as a "very successful but fairly small satellite launch company, bolted onto a stagnant money-losing social media company [X, formerly Twitter] and a money-incinerat...