Justices add new cases on bankruptcy, workers’ comp, and relief from final judgments

Justices add new cases on bankruptcy, workers’ comp, and relief from final judgments

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The Supreme Court on Monday morning added three new cases — involving bankruptcy law, civil procedure, and workers’ compensation — to its docket for the 2021-22 term. But the orders that the justices issued from their private conference on Jan. 7 were just as noteworthy for what they did not do: The court did not act on a pair of petitions challenging the consideration of race in the undergraduate admissions process at Harvard University and the University of North … Read the rest

During arguments over COVID-19 policy, two absent lawyers and more masks on the bench

During arguments over COVID-19 policy, two absent lawyers and more masks on the bench

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A View from the Courtroom is an inside look at significant oral arguments and opinion announcements unfolding in real time. 

There are several unusual and noteworthy things about today’s arguments in two cases regarding Biden administration responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.

But a snow day in Washington is not really one of them. After the surprisingly disruptive snowstorm that hit the capital region on Monday, bringing misery to those stuck on I-95 for 24 hours or more, … Read the rest

Biden vaccine policies face Supreme Court test amid nationwide COVID-19 surge

Biden vaccine policies face Supreme Court test amid nationwide COVID-19 surge

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With over 100,000 Americans hospitalized for COVID-19 as a result of the highly contagious Omicron variant, the Supreme Court will hear oral argument Friday in two sets of challenges to the Biden administration’s authority to take action to combat the pandemic. In the first case, National Federation of Independent Business v. Department of Labor, the justices will consider the Biden administration’s attempt to impose a vaccine-or-test mandate for workers at large employers. In the second case, Biden v. Read the rest

The statistics of relists over the past five terms: The more things change, the more they stay the same

The statistics of relists over the past five terms: The more things change, the more they stay the same

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Regular readers of SCOTUSblog know that in addition to flyspecking the Supreme Court’s docket most weeks to identify cert petitions that the justices are considering repeatedly at consecutive conferences (a practice called “relisting” cases), we periodically crunch the numbers to determine what relisting portends about what the court is likely to do with those cases it has relisted. Relists are a hint that at least some justices want to take a closer look at a case, which is often … Read the rest

Roberts to Congress on court reforms: We’re on it

Roberts to Congress on court reforms: We’re on it

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Chief Justice John Roberts began his 2021 year-end report, as he so often does, with an anecdote from history to set the stage. But by the end of the first page, the message of Roberts’ report, which he released as usual on the final day of the year, was clear. In a year when a presidential commission studied Supreme Court reform and members of Congress introduced major legislation to revamp aspects of the federal judiciary, Roberts argued that any … Read the rest

The lives they lived and the court they shaped: Remembering those we lost in 2021

The lives they lived and the court they shaped: Remembering those we lost in 2021

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The first Black woman to clerk on the Supreme Court. Two trailblazing civil-rights litigators. The unofficial barber of the justices. The woman who argued Roe v. Wade just a few years out of law school.

These were among the lives lost in 2021.

As we did last year, SCOTUSblog looks back and remembers some of the people who died this year and whose lives and work brought them to the highest court in the nation. Some were lawyers. Some … Read the rest

The morning read for Wednesday, Dec. 29

The morning read for Wednesday, Dec. 29

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Each weekday, we select a short list of news articles, commentary, and other noteworthy links related to the Supreme Court. To suggest a piece for us to consider, email us at roundup@scotusblog.com.

Here’s the Wednesday morning read:

  • The Supreme Court has upheld state and local vaccine mandates. That may not save Biden’s. (Tierney Sneed, CNN)
  • The year Supreme Court conservatives made their mark (Ariane de Vogue, CNN)
  • The Return, Abortion, Guns, and Breyer: Supreme Court in 2021 (Kimberly Strawbridge Robinson
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Term limits, transparency, and other proposed Supreme Court fixes

Term limits, transparency, and other proposed Supreme Court fixes

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