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Fourteen cases to watch from the Supreme Court’s end-of-summer “long conference”

SCOTUSBlog

But the 5th Circuit wrote that this case “may … attract the [Supreme] Court’s interest” because “[i]t tees up one of the fiercest (and oldest) fights in administrative law: the Humphrey’s Executor ‘exception to the general ‘rule’ that lets a president remove subordinates at will.” Calumet Shreveport Refining, L.L.C. ,

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Separation of powers and mental health evidence in capital sentencing

SCOTUSBlog

South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP , involving allegations of racial gerrymandering in a South Carolina congressional district. FDIC , involving separation of powers and administrative law claims. They will be reviewing only two of those petitions for the second time. First up is Calcutt v.

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“Remain in Mexico” and Texas’ anti-abortion law

SCOTUSBlog

After Texas and Missouri challenged that decision, a federal district court vacated the secretary’s termination, in part on the administrative-law ground that the decision was insufficiently explained. In June 2021, Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas of the Department of Homeland Security issued a decision terminating the policy.

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Profile of a potential nominee: Ketanji Brown Jackson

SCOTUSBlog

She spent the year between college and law school as a reporter and researcher at Time magazine in New York. In the 17 years following her graduation from law school, Jackson held a variety of legal jobs. She attained three federal clerkships, worked at four elite law firms, and served two stints with the Sentencing Commission.