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IRAP v. Trump: Applying The “Presumption of Regularity” in “Uncharted Territories”

May 9th, 2017

Yesterday, thirteen judges of the Fourth Circuit sitting en banc heard argument in IRAP v. Trump. Acting Solicitor General Jeffrey Wall handled with aplomb an hour of blistering questions from about seven or eight judges on the red-hot panel. Omar Jadwat, arguing for the ACLU, also faced an hour of questions, though only two or three judges seemed to challenge his position.

This post will highlight five of the government’s leading arguments: (1) that the court should apply a “presumption of regularity” to this case; (2) that because of Trump’s oath of office, courts should discount prior statements made on the campaign trail; (3) that when Trump said “we all know what that means,” he was not referring to the Muslim ban; (4) that Lemon and McCreary County should be cabined as “domestic” Establishment Clause cases; and (5) the impact of a ruling against this President would be to bind future Presidents.

By far, this was the strongest case yet for the U.S. government, and it offers a preview of the sorts of arguments the a majority of the Justices will likely find far more compelling than the majority of the Fourth Circuit.

 

“Presumption of Regularity”

The defining theme in the government’s presentation was urging the court to apply a “presumption of regularity.” As the government noted in its opening brief:

Under the Constitution’s structure and its separation of powers, courts evaluating a presidential policy directive should not second-guess the President’s stated purpose by looking beyond the policy’s text and operation. The “presumption of regularity” that attaches to all federal officials’ actions, United States v. Chem. Found., Inc., 272 U.S. 1, 14-15 (1926), applies with the utmost force to the President himself.

By my count, Wall repeated this phrase at least four times. In this clip, Judge Floyd asks “if there is anything other than willful blindness that would prevent us from getting behind those statements.” Wall responds, “Respect for the head of a coordinate branch, and a presumption that officials act legally, which is to say, the ‘presumption of regularity.’” Chief Judge Gregory interjects, and asks about whether that presumption prevents courts from assessing the constitutionality of actions. Wall replies that it does not, but that the “only thing” plaintiffs have is to “reach back” to “what was in the President’s head.” He admits there are “different ways to read those [political] statements,” but insists that “respect for a coordinate branch and a ‘presumption of regularity’ require reading them in a way that is not most hostile to the President, but would render the actions lawful.”

Judge Wynn says that, far from regularity, with respect to President Trump “we are in uncharted territories.” In response, Wall counters that the district court’s opinion was in fact “unprecedented.”

How should courts handle the “uncharted territories” of the Trump administration? Specifically, should courts afford Trump less deference because of his outlandish behavior? Recently, law professor Dawn Johnsen provided a guide:

Trump’s extraordinary—indeed, unprecedented— behavior more generally means that he is not due the deference traditionally afforded presidents. I feel confident that we all are hearing and thinking a great deal about Trump’s attacks on the courts and individual judges and his numerous false statements, including many about national security that reflect and foster prejudice and hate.

It is time to ask: Has Trump in effect forfeited some measure of judicial deference across contexts and cases, through his disrespect for the courts and the rule of law and his displays of prejudice and arbitrary decisionmaking? And if he has not yet reached that point, what more would it take?

Johnsen explains why the “presumption of regularity” ought not to apply to Trump:

Courts attend to reality and context, and they can and should adapt their screens of deference when circumstances so indicate. Again, the deference courts traditionally afford presidents is premised in part on the plausibility of some basic assumptions that typically go without saying, but that increasingly are implausible in the case of President Trump: that the president’s decisions reflect a respect for the rule of law, are informed by relevant advisors and information, are based in fact, and are in service of the public interest. Through his own actions across issues and in ways without precedent, Trump has eroded the plausibility of belief in even minimal versions of these traditional safeguards against executive action based on bad motive and arbitrary factors. To the contrary, Trump has evidenced a profound disrespect for the judiciary and the rule of law, has repeatedly told us that animus and improper motive infect at least some of his decisions, and often has misled or misstated facts to the public.

Examples are legion and widely known. Just a few: Trump’s false claim that President Obama used our national security apparatus to spy on him illegally (52 percent of Republicans believe that “the Obama administration intentionally spied on Trump and members of his campaign during the 2016 election campaign.”). Trump’s statements attacking the courts and individual judges, including suggesting that judges should be blamed for future violence and putting our country in peril. Trump’s numerous extreme, in some cases blatantly false, anti-Muslim statements. Trump’s irresponsible failure to take seriously financial conflicts of interests. Russian interference in our democracy.

I appreciate Johnsen’s candor, as she admits what the ACLU and other Attorneys General tap-dance around. She is openly asking courts to consider a litany of political grievances to determine that Trump is not entitled to the usual deference other Presidents have been afforded. Remarkably, Johnsen offered this counsel to a bevy of district and circuit judges of Indiana, Illinois, and Wisconsin during the Seventh Circuit Judicial Conference. This was an open invitation for the jurists in the room to join the resistance.

Even on these terms, I take exception to Johnsen’s rubric. As I discussed in my recent post, All the President’s Lawyers, Trump’s Twitter bark has no bite:

This pattern—where the President blows smoke up Twitter but his lawyers nudge him to act normally—has repeated itself over and over again. Why is this pattern relevant? Because all of the court decisions I mentioned above were premised on the President’s threatened, uninformed bluster, rather than the executive branch’s actual, informed actions. I admit it is somewhat disjointing to separate the President from the executive branch, but for better or (mostly) worse, such is the first four months of the Trump era. The bark is much worse than the bite. Indeed, the bark has no bite. It is all hot air. Rather than treating Trump’s tweets as existential threats to the rule of law, take them for what they are: uninformed rantings with zero legal effect. I’m sure lawyers within the administration would prefer the President stayed quiet, but that is not who he is. And fortunately, for the rule of law, what happens on Twitter stays on Twitter. Recognizing the fecklessness of Trump’s barbs should give courts pause before elevating his social media over actual policy statements.

In any event, the judiciary did not need Johnsen’s engraved invitation to join the resistance. The sorts of injunctions that have been entered by judges in Washington, Hawaii, and Maryland are premised on analyses never before seen in the Federal Reporter. These jurists figured it out without the nudging of the professoriate.

This sort of analysis will suffice for the inferior courts, but will have a short shelf life. I strongly doubt the Supreme Court will wade into such muddy waters. Can you imagine five Justices assessing the necessary level of “Russian interference in our democracy” before jettisoning the “presumption of regularity” as applied to President Trump’s executive actions?

 

“The Oath”

As a means to discount statements made by Trump prior to the inauguration, the Acting Solicitor General puts great weight in the oath of office. In contrast to Ben Wittes and Quinta Jurecic’s argument that Trump cannot possibly comply with his oath of office (a point I alluded to last year), the government contends that the oath transformed Trump—a constitutional baptism if you will—and thus earlier campaign-trail statements are off limits.

Consider this excerpt from the government’s brief:

Virtually all of the President’s statements on which the district court relied were made before he assumed office— before he took the prescribed oath to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution,” U.S. Const. art. II, § 1, cl. 8. Taking that oath marks a profound transition from private life to the Nation’s highest public office, and manifests the singular responsibility and independent authority to protect the welfare of the Nation that the Constitution necessarily reposes in the Office of the President. Virtually all of the statements also preceded the President’s formation of a new Administration, including Cabinet-level officials who recommended adopting the Order.

In this clip, the Solicitor General explains that since various political statements were made on the campaign trail, “we had some pretty constitutionally significant events here. The President was elected. He took an oath to uphold the Constitution. He formed a government. He consulted with his administration.” Judge Motz interjects that “that doesn’t give him the right to violate the Establishment Clause.” Wall replies, these events “should color the way we reach back at and look at previous statements before he was an elected official, before he faced the demands of government, before he consulted with an administration, and he took an oath that allowed him to occupy the nation’s highest office.” After this point, Wall returns to his earlier argument, and explained “out of respect, and the ‘presumption of regularity,’” we “don’t give the President the least charitable interpretation of what he said, we give it the most reasonable interpretation in order to render the executive order lawful.”

Wall closes with the most important point: the order, he said, “shouldn’t drift in and out of constitutionality based on what we think was in the head of the President that issued it.” Again, this drove home the theme that Trump should not be treated any differently than other Presidents. Indeed, during appellees’ time at the podium, the ACLU had to concede that had a President Clinton the same exact order, it would be constitutional. The legality of the order should not fluctuate based on “the President that issued it.”

 

“We all know what that means”

Because a few judges seemed persuaded by the oath argument, the colloquies focus at great length on six words uttered by the President when he signed the initial executive order on January 27, 2017: “We all know what that means.” Brief after brief has quoted this sentence as the silver bullet to prove that Trump was in fact enacting his secret Muslim ban. SG Wall conceded that this was the “best statement” in the record to support the plaintiffs’ case. Recall that President Clinton’s presidency nearly unraveled over the meaning of “is.” Now, could President Trump’s travel ban hinge on the meaning of “that”?

Before argument in the Fourth Circuit, I had never bothered to watch the signing ceremony in its entirety. I simply presumed the attorneys who were citing it in their briefs provided the full context. I was woefully mistaken. For lawyers who live in transcripts, context matters. Watch the entire thirteen-minute clip, and reassess your reading of “that.”

Here’s the set-up. President Trump and Vice President Pence arrive at the Hall of Heroes in the Pentagon, in a room full of high-ranking DOD officials.

First, Pence issues the oath of office to Mattis, wherein the former General pledges to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.” Mattis thanks the President and Vice President, and says that Trump has “made clear his strong commitment to national defense.”

Starting at the 5:00 minute mark, Trump takes the mic, and praises Mattis and the military.

At 7:34, Trump introduces the first of two executive orders he will soon sign:

We are in awe of their valor— tremendous valor, and we pledge our dedication to every single family serving our country and our flag. That is why today I am signing two executive actions to ensure the sacrifices of our military are supported by the actions of our government, and they will always be supported by the actions of our government. Believe me. First I’m signing an executive action to begin a great rebuilding of the Armed Services of the United States, developing a plan for new planes, new ships, new resources, and new tools for our men and women in uniform. And I’m very proud to be doing that. As we prepare our budget request or Congress —and I think Congress is going to be very happy to see it. Our military strength will be questioned by no one, but neither will our dedication to peace. We do want peace.

I’ve emphasized the word that to illustrate how Trump uses that word. Here, that refers to building the military to protect the homeland.

At 8:35, he introduces the second executive order, which is at issue in the litigation:

Secondly, I’m establishing new vetting measures to keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the United States of America. We don’t want them here. We want to ensure that we are not admitting into our country the very threats our soldiers are fighting overseas. We only want to admit those into our country who will support our country and love deeply our people. We will never forget the lessons of 9/11 nor the heroes who lost at the Pentagon. They were the best of us. We will honor them not only with our words, but with our actions, and that’s what we’re doing today. I am privileged to be here with you and I promise that our administration will always have your back. We will always be with you. And I just want to thank you very much.

What is the purpose of his second executive order? “To keep radical Islamic terrorists out of the United States of America.” That is what that refers to.

After thanking General Mattis again, at 10:50, Trump sits down at the desk to sign the first executive order:

OK. So, this is the rebuilding of the United States armed forces. That’s a big one. [Inaudible, though I think he pointed to someone in the audience, and said “It is so nice to see you.”] That’s a big statement, isn’t it, the rebuilding. Doesn’t that sound good? It’s been a while. Too long. Secretary Mattis.

Once again, I emphasized the word “that.” And again, he is referring back to the title of the executive order, not some super-secret purpose.

A few moments later, at 11:40, he picks up the second executive order, and squints at it. He reads the title: “This is the ‘Protection of the nation from foreign terrorist entry into the United States.’” For those snoots who seek to hold the President to grammatical certainty, he didn’t even read the title correctly. It is, “Protecting the Nation from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States.” Looking up from the order, he says, “We all know what that means.” He repeats the title again. “Protection of the nation from foreign terrorist entry into the United States.” He adds, “That’s big stuff.” He then signs the order.

Once again, he uses the word that to refer to the title of the order. For the first order, he said “that’s a big statement.” For the second order, he said “that’s big stuff.”

Moments later, the ceremony concludes. Trump says, “I want to thank everyone. Many great heroes, many great warriors. We have tremendous respect for you all.” The room bursts into a round of applause, as the President shakes hands with the new Secretary of Defense.

It is painfully obvious what Trump meant by “that.” Speaking in the Pentagon, after swearing in his Secretary of Defense, with the Vice President standing over his shoulder, the President was speaking about “keep[ing] radical Islamic terrorists out of the United States of America.” The premise that the President’s use of “that,” was a wink and a nod to bigotry is an illustration of motivated reasoning.

To make this point even more explicitly, the Secretary of Defense had just taken an oath to support and defend the Constitution, as did the Vice President, as did every officer in the room. It was broadcasted on live television. Does anyone plausibly think that anyone in that room could have conceivably thought the President was secretly signaling an outright ban on Muslims? It absolutely strains credulity. Under McCreary County (which I do not think even applies), this remark passes the “objective observer” test with flying colors. An objective observer could not possibly look at this ceremony as a whole and, on the basis of the word that, connect the initial executive order to Trump’s campaign promise in 2015. The proverbial missing link is simply missing.

Perhaps Trump, secretly, harbored this animus, and used a turn of phrase that no one else recognized. If that is so, then Justice Souter’s analysis about “secret motive” in McCreary is even more on point:

Nor is there any indication that the enquiry is rigged in practice to finding a religious purpose dominant every time a case is filed. In the past, the test has not been fatal very often, presumably because government does not generally act unconstitutionally, with the predominant purpose of advancing religion. That said, one consequence of the corollary that Establishment Clause analysis does not look to the veiled psyche of government officers could be that in some of the cases in which establishment complaints failed, savvy officials had disguised their religious intent so cleverly that the objective observer just missed it. But that is no reason for great constitutional concern. If someone in the government hides religious motive so well that the “`objective observer, acquainted with the text, legislative history, and implementation of the statute,'” Santa Fe, 530 U. S., at 308 (quoting Wallace, supra, at 76 (O’Connor, J., concurring in judgment)), cannot see it, then without something more the government does not make a divisive announcement that in itself amounts to taking religious sides. A secret motive stirs up no strife and does nothing to make outsiders of nonadherents, and it suffices to wait and see whether such government action turns out to have (as it may even be likely to have) the illegitimate effect of advancing religion.

Such an action could still fail the Lemon test if it has “the illegitimate effect of advancing religion,” but here, the purpose prong—the strongest part of the plaintiffs’ case—is off the table. They have to rely on its effect. As the Solicitor General aptly noted during argument, any official action taken towards one of those six countries would have a disproportionate effect on Muslims. For example, designating Syria or Iran a state sponsor or terror deprived the country, and thereby its residents—an overwhelming majority of which are Muslims—of a host of benefits. The plaintiffs need the purpose prong to prevail, hence the surplusage of amicus briefs imploring Justice Kennedy to find an improper animus behind the action.

In truth, this episode is little more than a Rorschach Test for the resistance. The signing ceremony was not an elegy for Pepe the frog. The commander in chief is standing in front of a room of America’s finest, pledges to help them protect the homeland, and signs the order. Only the most hostile, jaundiced viewer of such an uplifting ceremony could possibly think President Trump’s use of “that” was some sort of bigoted dog whistle to the alt right. Perhaps this argument passes for acceptable fare on MSNBC, but judges should, as Justice Scalia suggested, hide their head in a bag if their opinion hangs on this gossamer thread.

If you think my take is too sharp, consider the explanation of the Acting Solicitor General, who offered this measured response at 43:20 of the argument:

When he looked at the title of the order, which is projecting us from foreign terrorist countries, and said ‘we all know what this [sic] means,’ the reasonable reading is not the one the plaintiffs give to it, it is the President was talking about countries and groups that may intend to do us harm. And certainly in the face of ambiguity over what the Commander in Chief and head of the executive branch meant by an offhand six-word statement, this court ought to I think take that statement not at its least reasonable, not at its least permissible, but in a way that it was in accord with what the president and advisers had been talking about for months, which was terrorism.

That is, a pause on immigration from certain terror-prone regions. Not a Muslim ban.

 

“Domestic Establishment Clause”

In March, I wrote at some length that courts should hesitate before applying run-of-the-mill Establishment Clause cases like Lemon and McCreary County to the foreign policy context. Particularly in the context of immigration law, which routinely classifies aliens based on religious factors, there is reason to doubt that these precedents are even applicable. SG Wall advanced this point at least three times during argument labelling those cases “domestic Establishment Clause” precedents. The brief provides, citing dissental from the Ninth Circuit, that these cases are simply inapplicable:

Third, the Establishment Clause precedents that the district court applied in disregard of [Kleindienst v.] Mandel—addressing domestic questions involving local religious displays, school subsidies, and the like—have no proper application to foreign- policy, national-security, and immigration judgments of the President. The district court offered no justification for exporting McCreary County v. ACLU, 545 U.S. 844 (2005), and Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971), to this context. The “unreasoned assumption that courts should simply plop Establishment Clause cases from the domestic context over to the foreign affairs context ignores the realities of our world.” Washington Bybee Dissent 8 n.6. Indeed, the court’s reasoning would appear to extend to “every foreign policy decision made by the political branches, including our dealings with various theocracies across the globe.” Washington Kozinski Dissent 3 n.2. This Court should reject such extensive “intrusion of the judicial power into foreign affairs” committed to the political branches. Id.

The government does not go quite as far as to conclude that Lemon has no application beyond the border, as I do. It takes the safer, more moderate position that Mandel generally applies, unless the bad faith exception from Justice Kennedy’s Din concurrence is triggered. (For reasons I discuss here, Din is not triggered by the travel ban).

The domesticization of the Establishment Clause is a particularly compelling argument that so far only dissents have given attention to. However, when this matter arrives at the Supreme Court, I fully expect several Justices to be attuned to this issue. If the Establishment Clause applies with full force to foreign policy decision, many other aspects of immigration law—such as special visas for “the vocation of a minister ministers”—are now constitutionally suspect. The Justices will make more than a fleeting effort to fit this case into the broader doctrine of federal law.

 

“Constitutional Moment”

SG Wall’s prepared closing statement is a preview of the sort of argument that will be made to the Supreme Court:

The last thing, if I could say this, the order before this court has been the subject of a heated and passionate political debate, but the precedent set by this case for this court’s role in reviewing the president’s power at the borders will long transcend this debate and this order and this constitutional moment. In cases like this one, which is such intense feelings on both debate and this order and this constitutional moment. Sides, we would respectfully submit it is all the more important to apply the usual rules and interpretation and injunctive relief. We respectfully cement that that debate should be where it belongs in the political arena and this injunction should be vacated. Thank you.

Here, Dawn Johnsen’s conclusion is especially relevant:

And in order not to jeopardize executive power more generally and for other presidents in contexts where deference will remain appropriate and important, courts should take care not to downplay or sanitize facts peculiar to Trump that specially shift burdens and diminish the deference due.

The resistance seeks to gerrymander whatever precedents it sets here to constrain Trump, while leaving President Elizabeth Warren unfettered. That’s not how constitutional law works.

It is true that Trump consistently disrupts all political norms. The courts should not respond in kind by disrupting judicial norms. Trump’s presidency will come to an end sooner or later. But the precedents set during this period will linger far, far longer.

Cross-Posted at Lawfare.

Audio: Guest on the Michael Berry Show to discuss Yates’s Testimony and IRAP v. Trump

May 9th, 2017

Today at 5:03 p.m., Michael Berry DM’d me on Twitter, asking if I could go on his show. When, I asked? Now. With that, I spent the full hour with the talk show host talking about today’s crazy media day, which included Sally Yates’s testimony before Congress, oral arguments in IRAP v. Trump, and President Trump’s 10 judicial appointments (I did notice my disappointment that Justice Willett was not on the list).

Listen, and enjoy here:

Instant Analysis in IRAP v. Trump

May 8th, 2017

 

For details you can read this moment, listing my 105 tweets on the case.

I will have an Op-Ed in tomorrow’s NY Daily News about the arguments, as well as a deeper commentary in Lawfare.

 

Five Unanswered Questions From Trump v. Hawaii

July 3rd, 2018

The outcome in Trump v. Hawaii should not have been much of a surprise. In December, a majority of the Supreme Court allowed the entirety of the travel ban to go into effect temporarily. Over the past decade, when the Roberts Court has stayed a lower court’s ruling, it has almost always reversed its judgment. This case was no exception. Furthermore, the court resolved the legality of the presidential proclamation in its entirety. The justices did not settle on some sort of Solomonic split: for example, holding that the government could deny entry to aliens with non-immigrant visas but must admit aliens with immigrant visas. President Trump prevailed on all claims.

The court’s reasoning also should not come as a surprise, at least not for Lawfare readers who have followed my writing on the site. The majority opinion largely tracked the arguments I have made here over the past 18 months on at least nine discrete issues:

  • First, standing was premised on a “concrete injury” based on family reunification, not a “spiritual and dignitary injury.”
  • Second, there was no conflict between Section 1182(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, which allows the president to suspend entry to certain aliens, and Section 1152(a)(1)(a), which concerns the issuance of visas. These provisions “operate in different spheres.”
  • Third, the former provision does not impose temporal or other limitations on the president’s authority; rather, it “exudes deference to the President in every clause.”
  • Fourth, the travel ban does not run afoul of the non-delegation doctrine.
  • Fifth, the court declined to apply “Establishment Clause precedents concerning laws and policies applied domestically.” Instead, the relevant test from Kleindienst v. Mandel and Kerry v. Din was “whether the policy is facially legitimate and bona fide.” Under this standard, there was no need to look “extend beyond the facial neutrality of the order.”
  • Sixth, even assuming that the court can “look behind the face of the Proclamation to the extent of applying rational basis review,” the travel ban is “related to the Government’s stated objective to protect the country and improve vetting processes.”
  • Seventh, because the travel ban “has a legitimate grounding in national security concerns, quite apart from any religious hostility,” notwithstanding the president’s tweets and other statements, the court “must accept that independent justification.”
  • Eighth, in contrast to the Sotomayor dissent, the court afforded President Trump the “presumption of regularity.”
  • Finally, the court concluded that the comparison between the travel ban and Korematsu is inapposite.

The majority opinion, however, leaves open at least five unanswered questions that the judiciary is likely to have to address in the near future.

First, what happens on remand with respect to discovery?

The government appealed Trump v. Hawaii to the Supreme Court after preliminary injunctions were issued by district courts in Hawaii and Maryland. The Hawaii decision concluded only that the plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed on the merits at this preliminary phase. It was not, and could not have been, a final judgment on the merits. The penultimate sentence of the chief justice’s opinion explains that “[t]he judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.”

On remand, therefore, the plaintiffs are within their rights to seek a summary judgment, and even a trial, about whether the proclamation is unlawful. It is unlikely that additional proceedings would alter the court’s statutory analysis, which involved pure questions of law. However, further proceedings could shed light on the “animus” question with respect to the Establishment Clause. Noah Feldman, relaying comments from his colleague Owen Fiss, points out that “the standard of proof of bias that the plaintiffs would have to meet could actually be lower at trial than in their action seeking a preliminary injunction.” They are correct. Even if no further evidence is added to the record, it is entirely foreseeable that the district courts could rule against President Trump once again. But the record is not sealed. Feldman adds that “the plaintiffs could seek discovery to uncover new evidence of Trump’s thinking, including, potentially, drafts of the executive order or memos about it.”

Without question, the plaintiffs will seek discovery. They always do. And the district courts very well may oblige such requests. Following the lead of Justice Stephen Breyer’s dissent, the district courts could probe whether, in fact, exemptions are being granted under the terms of the proclamation. (If the government wants to avoid another trip to the Supreme Court, it should implement the waiver policies in a liberal fashion.) Justice Anthony Kennedy’s concurring opinion, however, erects important guardrails for allowing discovery beyond official records, such as waiver requests. First, Justice Kennedy questions “[w]hether judicial proceedings may properly continue in this case, in light of the substantial deference that is and must be accorded to the Executive in the conduct of foreign affairs and in light of today’s decision, is a matter to be addressed in the first instance on remand.” It is not a given that any further proceedings would be “proper,” given the court’s definitive ruling, albeit on a threshold question about the preliminary injunction. Specifically, Justice Kennedy writes that this may be a case wherein the president has “discretion free from judicial scrutiny.” Second, Justice Kennedy explains that “even if further proceedings are permitted, it would be necessary to determine that any discovery and other preliminary matters would not themselves intrude on the foreign affairs power of the Executive.” Again, he reiterates the deference due to the executive with respect to discovery matters.

Indeed, this admonition sheds light on the Supreme Court’s unsigned order from December in In Re United States. In this case, Judge William Alsup of the Northern District of California ordered the government to produce internal documents about its decision to terminate the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy. (To borrow from Feldman’s formulation, the plaintiffs sought “discovery to uncover new evidence of Trump’s thinking.”) The Supreme Court, however, issued a writ of mandamus, blocking the discovery request by a vote of 5 to 4. In dissent, Justice Breyer contended that “the Government’s arguments do not come close to carrying the heavy burden that the Government bears in seeking such extraordinary relief.” Based on Justice Kennedy’s concurring opinion in Trump v. Hawaii, the soon-to-be retired jurist likely agreed that the “heavy burden” was satisfied because of the risk of intruding onto the executive’s powers. Additionally, DACA—unlike the travel ban—does not implicate “the foreign affairs power of the Executive.” Yet, a majority of the court still intervened at an early juncture to halt intrusive discovery.

Shortly after Hawaii was decided, I tweeted that following remand, the Department of Justice should create a macro for Justice Kennedy’s opinion, because the department will have to cite it often:

 

 

 


 

In light of Kennedy’s concurrence and the order in the DACA case, I do not share Feldman and Fiss’s optimism as to the prospects of discovery for the plaintiffs here, beyond the production of official documents concerning the waiver process. The court—with or without Kennedy—will not lightly entertain intrusive discovery orders. And if no meaningful evidence is added to the record, it is difficult to see how the district courts could find the proclamation unlawful on remand.

Second, going forward, how should the lower courts treat “this President,” as opposed to “the President”?

On the eve of oral arguments, reporter Robert Barnes aptly summarized Trump v. Hawaii in a pithy headline for the Washington Post: “In travel ban case, Supreme Court considers ‘the president’ vs. ‘this president.’” The court chose the former. “[W]e must consider not only the statements of a particular President,” Chief Justice Roberts explained, “but also the authority of the Presidency itself.” Specifically, the court concluded that “[t]he entry suspension is an act that is well within executive authority and could have been taken by any other President—the only question is evaluating the actions of this particular President in promulgating an otherwise valid Proclamation.”

Justice Kennedy made this point explicitly in his concurring opinion. He referenced “the substantial deference that is and must be accorded to the Executive in the conduct of foreign affairs,” adding that “an official”—in this case, the president—“may have broad discretion, discretion free from judicial scrutiny.” Not all officials receive such deference. During oral arguments, Justice Kennedy asked the solicitor general about the relevance of “hateful statements” made by a “local mayor” “as a candidate.” As his concurring opinion illustrates, a “local mayor” is very different from the president of the United States. Likewise, the president of the United States is in a very different position from that of a mere commissioner of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission, who disparaged the beliefs of Jack Phillips, the owner of the Masterpiece Cake Shop. Both the majority and concurring opinions in Hawaii reflect a principle I refer to as the Presidential avoidance canon”: because of his unique role in the separation of powers, the law applies differently to the president than it does to anyone else. As I noted in a recent post on obstruction of justice, without question, the president is not “above the law.” The far more important question is: What “law” applies to the president?

In stark contrast, Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s dissent focused primarily, if not exclusively, on “this president.” Will Baude pointed out that “Justice Sotomayor’s dissent contains repeated references to ‘President Trump,’” and “mentions the ‘Trump administration.’” He added, “I doubt that either is an accident.” Indeed, as Justice Sotomayor delivered her opinion from the bench, she expressly referred to “President Donald Trump.” I was surprised that she used the president’s first name.

At a minimum, Trump v. Hawaii—coupled with the imminent arrival of a new justice—should further lower the temperature of the judiciary toward President Trump. A ruling against the president, however, would have sent the opposite signal to an emboldened lower-court judiciary. Still, the lower courts will no doubt take notice of the fact that the Supreme Court considered extrinsic evidence, including pre-inauguration campaign-trail statements. Although that evidence did not tip the balance in this case, under the deferential standard of review the court applied, such evidence may yield a different result in cases involving domestic affairs—such as the DACA litigation—with more stringent scrutiny.

One additional note on this point: The special counsel’s attorneys should carefully review the court’s opinion with respect to how the president’s statements ought to be considered in the broader context of foreign relations. (Yes, that includes L’Affaire Russe.) Specifically, they should consider how thoroughly the courts can probe the president’s intent when a facially neutral reason is afforded to explain his actions. The presidential avoidance canon counsels against robust applications of the obstruction statute when the president is engaging in what Justice Kennedy referred to as “spheres” wherein the executive “may have broad discretion, discretion free from judicial scrutiny.”

Third, how does the Constitution apply to aliens who are not seeking entry into the United States but have already crossed the border?

Does Trump v. Hawaii inform other immigration-related litigation, such as cases concerning the rescission of DACA, the rights of asylum seekers and family-separation policies? The short answer is no, not directly. The level of scrutiny in Trump v. Hawaii was extremely deferential, but it was employed in a limited context. Chief Justice Roberts explained that the “exclusion of foreign nationals is a ‘fundamental sovereign attribute exercised by the Government’s political departments largely immune from judicial control.’” The key word in that sentence is “exclusion.” The pivotal question, then, is how does Hawaii extend to other pending cases that do not involve “exclusion”? It is helpful to distinguish between four categories of cases: (1) aliens seeking entry into the United States; (2) aliens outside the United States not seeking entry; (3) aliens who recently crossed the border into the United States; and (4) aliens within the border. The Constitution applies to each category differently.

Trump v. Hawaii provides the rule only for the first category. The chief justice’s opinion describes entry as “the privilege of admission,” not a right. This statement of law comes from Landon v. Plasencia (1982), which Roberts did not cite: “an alien seeking initial admission to the United States requests a privilege and has no constitutional rights regarding his application, for the power to admit or exclude aliens is a sovereign prerogative.” This is not to say aliens seeking entry to the United State reside in a constitutional desert. Chief Justice Roberts acknowledged that an American “person’s interest in being united with his relatives [outside the United States] is sufficiently concrete and particularized to form the basis of an Article III injury in fact.” However, this interest in family unity is not governed by the domestic substantive due process standard under the Fifth Amendment. For example, several amici cited Moore v. City of East Cleveland for the proposition that “the Constitution protects the sanctity of the family precisely because the institution of the family is deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition.” Yet, Moore was not even mentioned by the majority or dissenting opinions. Aliens seeking admission are not due the same process as those already in the United States. (Contrast the facts in Hawaii with Boumediene v. Bush, which found that “noncitizens detained by our Government in territory over which another country maintains de jure sovereignty [have] rights under our Constitution.”) Likewise, the court found that “Establishment Clause precedents concerning laws and policies applied domestically” are simply inapplicable to the context of a foreign exclusion order. Furthermore, under the rule in Mandel, the court’s domestic precedents concerning the freedom of speech—in which strict scrutiny is applied—are also inapplicable. Yet the court deliberately cabined its analysis “matters of entry and national security.”

Hawaii does not provide the rule for the second category: what rights are due to aliens outside the United States who are not seeking entry. In 2017, the Supreme Court left this question open in Hernandez v. Mesa. In that case, a border patrol agent fired two bullets across the border, killing a Mexican national. After deciding Ziglar v. Abassi, the court remanded Hernandez back to the Fifth Circuit to consider whether damages are available under the Bivens doctrine. On remand, the en banc Fifth Circuit rejected the argument that the Fourth and Fifth Amendments protected “foreign citizens on foreign soil” Hernandez v. Mesa, 885 F.3d 811, 817 (5th Cir. 2018). Hernandez has been appealed to the Supreme Court a second time. Justice Kennedy’s replacement will be able to decide whether certiorari should be granted.

The third category concerns aliens who recently crossed the border into the United States. As a threshold matter, aliens who make it across the border are in a very different position than those outside seeking entry. Without question, aliens inside the United States are protected by the Constitution but do not receive the full panoply of rights and processes that are due to citizens. However, aliens who recently (an ill-defined term) entered the United States may be treated as if they had never entered in the first place. For example, the Third Circuit recently recognized in Castro v. DHS that aliens who are “apprehended within hours of surreptitiously entering the United States . . . cannot invoke the Constitution, including the Suspension Clause,” because they were treated as if they were “‘alien[s] seeking initial admission to the United States.’”Such recent entries may be afforded certain statutory protections—such as asylum laws—but, under this rule, cannot avail themselves of substantive and procedural constitutional protections. Trump v. Hawaii does not shed much light on this specific issue, which the Supreme Court has yet to address. However, as the court recognized in Landon, “once an alien gains admission to our country and begins to develop the ties that go with permanent residence his constitutional status changes accordingly.” Or, as the court explained in United States v. Verdugo-Urquidez (1990), “aliens receive constitutional protections when they have come within the territory of the United States and developed substantial connections with this country.”

The fourth category considers the constitutional rights of aliens who are within the United States. In Zadvydas v. Davis, the Supreme Court recognized that “once an alien enters the country, the legal circumstance changes, for the Due Process Clause applies to all ‘persons’ within the United States, including aliens, whether their presence here is lawful, unlawful, temporary, or permanent.” Yet that holding merely raises the question of what process is due. Specifically, do noncitizens receive the full panoply of constitutional rights? The simple answer is that they do not. Zadvydas acknowledged “that the Due Process Clause protects an alien subject to a final order of deportation . . . though the nature of that protection may vary depending upon status and circumstance.” In Osorio-Martinez v. Attorney General, for example, the Third Circuit found that aliens with the requisite connection with the United States “enjoy at least ‘minimum due process rights.’” The panel, however, did not explain precisely what those “minimum” rights are. There is also an open question of whether the federal government could expand “expedited removal” procedures into the interior of the United States—currently, regulations limit such removals to areas within 100 miles of the border. Beyond procedural rights, aliens lack certain substantive rights. For example, even lawful permanent residents are denied basic First and Second Amendment rights: They cannot contribute to political campaigns and are subject to a categorical ban on firearm ownership. Other issues are being actively litigated. Some courts have found that a liberty interest in family unity based on the Due Process Clause prevents the separation of parents from their children. And the Supreme Court did not resolve the scope of abortion rights that are due unaccompanied minors who are held in federal custody, a matter with which the D.C. Circuit has struggled recently. Trump v. Hawaii, far from a comprehensive explication of presidential power at the border, leaves these issues unresolved.

Fourth, what is the scope of the president’s Article II powers?

Because the court found that the “Proclamation is squarely within the scope of Presidential authority,” it did not need to address the scope of the president’s Article II powers. (Had the court found that Congress did not delegate this authority to the president, or that we were in Youngstown’s “zone of twilight,” it would have had to answer this question.) Justice Clarence Thomas’s concurring opinion, however, addressed this question directly. He cited United States ex rel. Knauff v. Shaughnessy (1950) for the proposition that “the President has inherent authority to exclude aliens from the country.”

The scope of the president’s Article II powers may return to the court in the DACA litigation. Recall that Attorney General Jeff Sessions initially justified the recision of the deferred action policy because he determined it was unlawful. In several various writings, I have urged the Justice Department to state this position more forcefully. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen explained in a recent memorandum, however, that DACA was terminated without regard to any Article II argument. As a result, the Supreme Court likely will not have to address the scope of the president’s inherent powers unless the justices find that Nielsen’s other justifications are inadequate.

Finally, what is the permissible scope of a nationwide injunction?

Because the Supreme Court found that the proclamation was lawful in its entirety, it did not have occasion to address the validity of nationwide injunctions. Justice Thomas thoroughly addressed that issue in his solo concurring opinion: “I am skeptical that district courts have the authority to enter universal injunctions. These injunctions did not emerge until a century and a half after the founding. And they appear to be inconsistent with longstanding limits on equitable relief and the power of Article III courts. If their popularity continues, this Court must address their legality.”

The lower courts have already taken notice. Earlier this year, a district court found that the attorney general could not deny Chicago certain federal funding because of the city’s “sanctuary” policies. Rather than limiting its relief to Chicago, the court entered a nationwide injunction. A panel of the Seventh Circuit unanimously affirmed the ruling but split 2-1 on the validity of the nationwide injunction. The attorney general asked the en banc Seventh Circuit to limit the relief to the city of Chicago. The en banc court granted review but postponed ruling on whether the nationwide injunction should be stayed until “the Supreme Court’s resolution of Trump v. Hawaii.” The U.S. solicitor general sought an application for a stay from the Supreme Court. Hours after Hawaii was decided, the en banc Seventh Circuit put the nationwide injunction on hold.

Eventually, the Supreme Court will address the scope of nationwide injunctions in the sanctuary city, or perhaps the DACA litigation.

Cross-Posted at Lawfare

Commentary, Media Hits, and Events (March 5 – May 30)

May 31st, 2018

Here are my commentaries, media hits, and speaking engagements from March 5, 2018 through May 30, 2018. The bulk of these hits concern the CUNY protest, as well as the travel ban.

 

Articles

  1. Defiance and Surrender, 59 So. Texas L. Rev. (2018).

 

Commentary

  1. Conservative and Libertarian Lawyers in the Era of Trump, Lawfare (May 29, 2018).
  2. Dueling Cosmic Injunctions, DACA and Departmentalism, Lawfare (May 22, 2018).
  3. The Easy Way Forward on Trump v. Hawaii, Lawfare (Apr. 25, 2018).
  4. CUNY Law students heckled my talk on campus free speech, NY Daily News (Apr. 21, 2018).
  5. Students at CUNY Law Protested and Heckled My Lecture about Free Speech on Campus, National Review (Apr. 12, 2018).
  6. Testing California’s “Sanctuary Law,” Wall Street Journal (Mar. 13, 2018) (with Ilya Shapiro) (Reproduction).
  7. Analysis of IRAP v. Trump Part I: The Fourth Circuit’s Reliance on Pre- and Post-Inauguration Statements, Lawfare (May 27, 2017).
  8. Analysis of IRAP v. Trump Part II: The Fourth Circuit’s Misuse of Mandel, Din, Lemon, and Town of Greece, Lawfare (May 28, 2017).

 

Media

  1. Quoted in What’s Missing From Stories on Campus Free Speech?, Education Writers Association (May 25, 2018).
  2. Guest on The Michael Berry Show to discuss ruling about the President’s Twitter account (May 24, 2018).
  3. Quoted in Gorsuch Takes Inside-Player Role in Second Term on Supreme Court, Bloomberg (May 24, 2018).
  4. Guest on the Michael Berry Show to discuss the Supreme Court (May 23, 2018).
  5. Cited in When it Comes to Sharing a Laugh at SCOTUS, the Late Justice Scalia is Still Supreme, Texas Lawyer (May 22, 2018).
  6. Quoted in Kennedy retirement rumors shift into overdrive, The Hill (May 21, 2018).
  7. Cited in First they came for Josh Blackman: why censorship isn’t the answer, Oxford University Press Blog (May 17, 2018).
  8. Quoted in PETA lawsuit against Texas A&M turns Facebook comments into a First Amendment issue, Houston Chronicle (May 16, 2018).
  9. Quoted in DACA’s legal labyrinth, Politico (May 14, 2018).
  10. Quoted in Mobs Against Our Rule, Townhall (May 6, 2018).
  11. Quoted in Five legal headaches facing Trump, The Hill (May 6, 2018).
  12. Quoted in Tennessee Again Rejects Anti-Discrimination Ethics Rule, Bloomberg BNA (May 1, 2018).
  13. Quoted in NBC reports Feds monitored Cohen’s phone, The Hill (May 3, 2018).
  14. Quoted in Parsing presidential intent, World (May 3, 2018).
  15. Guest on KURV to discuss the CUNY Protest (May 2, 2018).
  16. Quoted in Trump Claims Immunity In Bid To Ditch Emoluments Case, Law360 (May 2, 2018).
  17. Quoted in Texas lawsuit brings DACA déjà vu, CNN (May 2, 2018).
  18. Quoted in Does Mueller’s probe infringe upon Trump’s constitutional authority?, Yahoo News (May 2, 2018).
  19. Guest on the Texas Standard to discuss DACA Suit (May 2, 2018) (Audio).
  20. Cited in Free Speech Norms should be Different on a Law School Campus, The Faculty Lounge (May 2, 2018).
  21. Cited in Colleges: Anti-Diversity and Pro-Exclusion, Creators: Walter E. Williams (May 2, 2018).
  22. Quoted in As the Supreme Court considers Trump’s travel ban, some want justices to remember a case they decided 74 years ago, WUNC North Carolina Public Radio (May 2, 2018).
  23. Quoted in Lawyers have enhanced duty of confidentiality when engaging in public commentary, ABA Journal (May 1, 2018).
  24. Quoted in Administrators at CUNY and Duke Aren’t Going to Do Anything About Students Who Disrupted Events, Reason (Apr. 27, 2018).
  25. Quoted in 8 Minutes Hate, No Big Deal, Says CUNY Law Dean, Forbes (Apr. 27, 2018).
  26. Quoted in US judge rules against Trump move to end DACA program, Tri-Lake Tribune (Apr. 27, 2018).
  27. Guest on National Constitution Center – We the People Podcast: The Supreme Court considers the travel ban case (April 26, 2018) (Audio).
  28. Guest on SCOTUS 101 Podcast (Apr. 26, 2014).
  29. Quoted in La corte no permite a Trump finalizar DACA, pero abre la puerta a una victoria en la apelación, La Grane Poca (Apr. 26, 2014).
  30. Supreme Court Notebook, A.P. (Apr. 26, 2018).
  31. Quoted in Experts Say Trump Has Strong Position in Supreme Court’s Travel Ban Case, Lifezette (Apr. 25, 2018).
  32. Quoted in As College Decision Day Approaches, Parents Should Beware, Townhall (Apr. 25, 2018).
  33. Quoted in Kennedy, conservatives appear to back Trump on travel ban, CNN (Apr. 25, 2018).
  34. Guest on WBAL News Now with Bryan Nehman to discuss the Travel Ban (Apr. 25, 2018).
  35. Guest on KTRH’s Houston Morning News to discuss the Travel Ban (Apr. 25, 2018).
  36. Guest on KPCC’s AirTalk with Larry Mantle to discuss the Travel Ban (Apr. 25, 2018).
  37. Guest on BBC World Service to discuss the Travel Ban Case (Apr. 25, 2018).
  38. Quoted in Courts Give Trump a Possible Path Through a Legal Minefield on Immigration, New York Times (Apr. 25, 2018).
  39. Quoted in As Supreme Court hears travel ban, questions of presidential authority also on docket, Christian Science Monitor (Apr. 25, 2018).
  40. Quoted in Why All Libertarians Should Hope that the Supreme Court Throws Out Trump’s Travel Ban, Reason (Apr. 25, 2018).
  41. Quoted in When childish law students protest against speech with impunity, we all lose, The Hill (Apr. 25, 2018).
  42. Quoted in Supreme Court appears split on Trump’s travel ban, Politico (Apr. 25, 2018).
  43. Quoted in As Trump travel ban (finally) reaches Supreme Court, his talk and tweets are center stage, USA Today (Apr. 24, 2018).
  44. Quoted in Federal judge orders complete restart of DACA, Washington Times (Apr. 24, 2018).
  45. Quoted in The Supreme Court is about to weigh in on Trump’s Muslim ban, Salon (Apr. 24, 2018).
  46. Cited in The Problem With Social Media Isn’t The Media, It’s The Social, The Federalist (Apr. 24, 2018).
  47. Quoted in Trump’s Travel Ban Comes Before Supreme Court in Test of Presidential Power, Bloomberg (Apr. 23, 2018).
  48. Quoted in Supreme Court justices to weigh in on Trump’s powers with travel ban case, Washington Times (Apr. 23, 2018).
  49. Cited in Student group disrupted law professor’s talk because dean ‘failed to provide a safe space’, College Fix (Apr. 23, 2018).
  50. Cited in CUNY law students explain what protesters meant when they said ‘f**k the law’ at conservative speech, Twitchy (Apr. 23, 2018).
  51. Cited in CUNY National Lawyers Guild actually issued a Statement on “What We Mean When We Say “F*ck the Law’”, Legal Insurrection (Apr. 23, 2018).
  52. Quoted in Travel ban case comes as Supreme Court’s first dive into Trump Policy, A.P. (Apr. 23, 2018).
  53. Guest on WBUR’s On Point to discuss the travel ban (Apr. 23, 2018) (Audio).
  54. Quoted in CUNY law professors refuse to speak about student mob that disrupted scholar’s talk on free speech, The College Fix (Apr. 23, 2018).
  55. Quoted in Supreme Court takes on Trump’s travel ban, Washington Examiner (Apr. 23, 2018).
  56. Quoted in Senate Judiciary Committee drafts bill to protect Mueller from Trump firing, Washington TImes (Apr. 22, 2018).
  57. Quoted in In travel ban case, Supreme Court considers ‘the president’ vs. ‘this president’, Washington Post (Apr. 22, 2018).
  58. Quoted in Mobs Win at CUNY and Duke, Commentary (Apr. 22, 2018).
  59. Quoted in More campus concerns, The Oklahoman Editorial Board (Apr. 21, 2018).
  60. Quoted in Supreme Court to consider Trump’s travel ban, The Hill (Apr. 21, 2018).
  61. Quoted in ‘F*** the Law!’: CUNY Law School Students Disrupt Professor’s Lecture on Free Speech, Fox News (Apr. 19, 2018).
  62. Guest on Tucker Carlson Tonight, Fox New Channel to discuss CUNY Protest (Apr. 19, 2018) (Video).
  63. Quoted in On the ground in Josephine Co.: Why some want cannabis grows gone, Portland Business Journal (Apr. 19, 2018).
  64. Cited in Are CUNY Administrators Mobsters?, Accuracy in Academia (Apr. 19, 2018).
  65. Quoted in Heckled law prof: CUNY Law would have sicced cops on pro-life protest of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, The College Fix (Apr. 18, 2018).
  66. Guest on Federalist Society Podcast – Preview of Trump v. Hawaii (Apr. 16, 2018) (Audio).
  67. Cited in Yes, student protesters are capable of controlling themselves, The College Fix (Apr. 18, 2018).
  68. Quoted in Conservative Law Prof Heckled by CUNY Protestors Warns of Troubling Trend, National Law Journal (Apr. 17, 2018).
  69. Quoted in “‘It is a bizarre thing to say “f-ck the law” when you are in law school’” The College Fix (Apr. 17, 2018).
  70. Quoted in University won’t punish students who disrupted conservative professor’s speech, The College Fix (Apr. 17, 2018).
  71. Quoted in CUNY’s Law Dean Is Wrong About the Attempted Shutdown of Josh Blackman, Reason (Apr. 17, 2018).
  72. Cited in Blame The Left For The Rise Of Moralizing In America, The Federalist (Apr. 17, 2018).
  73. Guest on The Michael Berry Show to Discuss the CUNY Protest (Apr. 16, 2018).
  74. Cited in KCRW’s Left, Right, and Center (Apr. 15, 2018).
  75. Cited in Travel Ban Case Is Shadowed by One of Supreme Court’s Darkest Moments, N.Y. Times (Apr. 16, 2018).
  76. Quoted in CUNY Law’s Disgrace, City Journal (Apr. 16, 2018).
  77. Cited on WBAL’s Brett Hollander Show regarding CUNY Protest (Apr. 15, 2018).
  78. Guest on The Laura Ingraham Show to Discuss CUNY Law Protest (Apr. 13, 2018).
  79. Quoted in Using Speech to Disrupt Speech – Drawing Sensible, Constitutional Lines, In a Crowded Theater (Apr. 13, 2018).
  80. Quoted in ‘F*** the law’: Watch law students disrupt law professor’s speech. His topic is sadly ironic, The Blaze (Apr. 13, 2018).
  81. Guest on WLS’s Big John and Ramblin’ Ray to discuss CUNY Potest (Apr. 13, 2018) (Audio).
  82. Quoted in Campus free speech is threatened. But how much?, Washington Post (Apr. 13, 2018).
  83. Quoted in Professor Talks of Heckling — at Free Speech Lecture, Lifezette (Apr. 13, 2018).
  84. Quoted in CUNY students call law prof ‘racist’ for supporting free speech, Campus Reform (Apr. 13, 2018).
  85. Quoted in New York Law Student: ‘F*** The Law!’, Daily Caller (Apr. 12, 2018).
  86. Guest on Cam and Company, Student Hecklers Disrupt Campus Free Speech Lecture (Apr. 12, 2018) (Video).
  87. Quoted in CUNY Students Tried to Shout Down Josh Blackman. Here’s Why They Failed, Reason (Apr. 12, 2018).
  88. Quoted in CUNY Law Students Disrupt Free-Speech Lecture, National Review (Apr. 12, 2018).
  89. Quoted in Students At CUNY Attempt To Shut Down Speech By Law Professor Josh Blackman, Hot Air (Apr. 12, 2018).
  90. Quoted in Can Donald Trump fire Special Counsel Robert Mueller?, Politifact (Apr. 12, 2018).
  91. Quoted in Organized Heckling at CUNY School of Law of Prof. Josh Blackman Talk on Free Speech, Reason (Apr. 12, 2018).
  92. Quoted in Law Students Shout ‘F–k the Law’ While Disrupting Free Speech Lecture, Law & Crime (Apr. 12, 2018).
  93. Quoted in Justice Gorsuch forms conservative triumvirate on Supreme Court, Washington Times (Apr. 8, 2018).
  94. Guest on WNYC’s The Takeaway to discuss Justice Gorsuch’s first year (Apr. 10, 2018).
  95. Quoted in Four Circuits to Watch as Trump Nominees Face Time Hurdle, Bloomberg BNA (Apr. 4, 2018).
  96. Quoted in Justice Gorsuch confirms conservatives’ hopes, liberals’ fears in first year on Supreme Court, USA Today (April 8, 2018).
  97. Quoted in In Extraordinary Filing, Former Nat Sec Officials Urge SCOTUS To End Travel Ban, Daily Caller (April 6, 2018).
  98. Quoted in Trump v. California: The Biggest Legal Clashes, N.Y. Times (April 5, 2018).
  99. Quoted in The executive branch pushes the boundaries of the separation of powers, ABA Journal (April 1, 2018).
  100. Quoted in Judge’s death gives Trump the opportunity to overhaul the liberal 9th Circuit, Washington Examiner (Mar. 31, 2018).
  101. Guest on Fox 5 New York to discuss Justice Stevens’s proposal to repeal 2nd Amendment (Mar. 28, 2018).
  102. Quoted in Orange County Pushes Back against California’s Sanctuary-State Laws, National Review (Mar. 28, 2018).
  103. Quoted in New judicial litmus test, used to select Gorsuch, aims to shrink the ‘administrative state’, ABA Journal (Mar. 28, 2018).
  104. Guest on KLIF 570 News to discuss Justice Stevens’s proposal to repeal 2nd Amendment (Mar. 28, 2018).
  105. Guest on KNX Radio (Los Angeles) to discuss Justice Stevens’s proposal to repeal 2nd Amendment (Mar. 27, 2018).
  106. Quoted in Trump’s New Judicial Litmus Test: Shrinking ‘the Administrative State’, N.Y. Times (Mar. 26, 2018).
  107. Quoted in Justice Dept. Proposes Banning Bump Stocks, Setting Aside Its Own Recommendations, N.Y. Times (Mar. 23, 2018).
  108. Guest on AirTalk with Larry Mantle – 89.3 KPCC to discuss Zervos v. Trump (Mar. 21, 2018).
  109. Quoted in Trump’s Newest Tweet Target: Solicitor General Noel Francisco, National Law Journal (Mar. 21, 2018).
  110. Quoted in How Trump Could Fire Mueller, Valuewalk (Mar. 20, 2018).
  111. Quoted in Constitutional and legal ethics scholar Ronald Rotunda dies at 73, ABA Journal (Mar. 20, 2018).
  112. Mentioned on The Jim Bohnannon Show with respect to Obamacare individual mandate (Mar. 18, 2018).
  113. Quoted in The NRA’s lawsuit against Florida is flimsy, The Economist (Mar. 17, 2018).
  114. Guest on Daily Journal Podcast, “Sanctuary and Supremacy,” (Mar. 16, 2018).
  115. Quoted in Jeff Sessions made ‘error’ in DACA legal memo, says Justice Department, Washington Times (Mar. 14, 2018).
  116. Quoted in Defense Dept. charged nearly $140,000 at Trump branded properties, CNN (Mar. 14, 2018).
  117. Quoted in Jeff Sessions’ Case Against California’s Sanctuary Cities Is a Constitutional Loser, Reason (Mar. 14, 2018).
  118. Quoted in Pressured by Trump, A.T.F. Revisits Bump Stock Rules, N.Y. Times (Mar. 13, 2018).
  119. Guest on Supreme Court Landmark Case – Yick Wo v. Hopkins, C-SPAN (Mar. 12, 2018) (Video).
  120. Quoted in Can ‘Texas v. United States’ Set Us Free From Obamacare?, The American Spectator (Mar. 12, 2018).
  121. Quoted in Suing California: What Washington’s move means for future conflicts, Christian Science Monitor (Mar. 8, 2018).
  122. Guest on AirTalk with Larry Mantle – 89.3 KPCC to Discuss the new Sanctuary CIty suit (Mar. 7, 2018) (Audio)
  123. Quoted in Campus Speech Protest Draws Call to Discipline Law Students, Bloomberg Law (Mar. 7, 2018).
  124. Quoted in Lawyers for Mexican journalist blame his detention in the U.S. on Trump’s ‘anti-Mexican bias’, L.A. Times (Mar 6. 2018).
  125. Quoted in The Supreme Court May Revive a Legal Theory Last Used to Strike Down New Deal Laws, Slate (Mar. 5, 2018).
  126. Quoted in The resistance is using the courts to fight Trump, but Trump is winning there, too, Washington Examiner (Mar. 5, 2018).
  127. Quoted in DACA case could hit the Supreme Court in a matter of months, experts say, Washington Examiner (Mar. 5, 2018).

 

Academic Presentations

  1. Presidential Speech, Yale Freedom of Expression Scholars Conference (Apr. 29, 2018).
  2. The Presidency Beyond Trump: The Perils of Judging Executive Action by Motives, NYU Law School (Mar. 30, 2018).
  3. The Irrepressible Myths of Cooper v. Aaron, Northern Kentucky University Faculty Workshop (Mar. 14, 2018).

 

Events

  1. Free Speech on Campus, Educational Writers Association National Seminar (May 16, 2018).
  2. Cosmic Injunctions and DACA, Chicago Federalist Society Lawyers Chapter (May 15, 2018).
  3. Debate: The Affordable Care Act, Boston College Federalist Society Chapter (Apr. 18, 2018).
  4. Predicting the Supreme Court, Vermont Law School Federalist Society Chapter (Apr. 12, 2018).
  5. Debate: Restoring the Lost Confirmation, Roger Williams Federalist Society Chapter (Apr. 12, 2018).
  6. Debate on the Emoluments Clauses: University of Chicago Federalist Society Chapter (Apr. 9, 2018).
  7. Panel Discussion on Immigration, University of North Dakota Federalist Society Chapter (Apr. 6, 2018) (Video).
  8. Predicting the Supreme Court, Rutgers-Camden Federalist Society Chapter (Apr. 4, 2018).
  9. Debate: The Second Amendment after Parkland, SMU Federalist Society and American Constitution Society (Apr. 2, 2018).
  10. Presidential Maladministration, NYU Federalist Society Chapter (Mar. 28, 2018).
  11. Bioethics and the Supreme Court, Villanova Federalist Society Chapter (Mar. 28, 2018).
  12. Economic Liberty and the Criminal Law, Waynesburg University (Mar. 15, 2018).
  13. Richard Cordray, Donald Trump, and the CFPB: Constitutional Questions, Cincinnati Federalist Society Lawyers Chapter (Mar. 15, 2018).
  14. Debate on the Travel Ban, Northern Kentucky University Federalist Society Chapter (Mar. 13, 2018).
  15. The Travel Ban and Sanctuary Cities, Indianapolis Federalist Society Lawyers Chapter (Mar. 12, 2018).
  16. Becoming an Academic: 2018 Federalist Society National Student Symposium (Mar. 10, 2018).
  17. Debate on Sanctuary Cities, McGeorge Federalist Society Chapter (Mar. 7, 2018) (Video).
  18. Debate on the Travel Ban, Santa Clara Federalist Society Chapter (Mar. 5, 2018).
  19. Fake News and the First Amendment, Houston Bar Association (Feb. 3, 2018).

 

Court Filings and Comments

  1. Comments on states considering the adoption of Model Rule 8.4(g).