A Few Somewhat Random Reactions to the Court’s Latest Term, Part Two: Movement Conservatism Drops All Pretense
The US Supreme Court's just-completed term will go down as another bloodbath for American constitutionalism, for the rule of law, and even for basic decency. In yesterday's Part One of this two-part column, I explained that my goal is not to provide a "summary of the term" analysis along the lines that Professor Dorf has already done so well. Instead, I have collected a few stray threads within various cases that might provide useful ways to think about what is happening and is likely to happen in the near future. Yesterday's entry promised a long list of such stray threads, but in fact my first two examples were more than enough to fill a column (and then some). Those two examples included a good outcome ( Chatrie v. U.S. , a Fourth Amendment case the Professor Matthew Tokson nicely analyzed in three posts on this blog) and one with a very bad outcome ( Mullin v. Al Otro Lado , in which the Roberts Six played with words to negate a duly enacted statute). To ...