Supreme Court questions jurisdiction in sweeping election law clash | The Hill

The Supreme Court on Thursday questioned whether it can still move ahead in a major election law case involving the authority of state legislatures. The justices are hearing an appeal from North Carolina Republican lawmakers of a decision by the state’s top court, which struck down North Carolina’s GOP-drawn voting maps. But that underlying decision was overruled last week, and the Supreme Court in a brief, unsigned order has asked for additional briefing on whether it still has jurisdiction.

The development is the latest sign the justices may be heading toward an off-ramp in the high-stakes case, which has weighty stakes for future elections. In Washington, D.C., the Republican lawmakers promoted a sweeping constitutional argument that would give near-total authority to state legislatures in drawing congressional maps and settling other federal election issues, known as the independent state legislature theory.

But Republicans in the midterm elections retook control of the North Carolina Supreme Court, and the new majority agreed to rehear the court’s earlier order striking down the legislature’s maps. The court overruled that decision along partisan lines on Friday. Now, the U.S. Supreme Court justices have asked the parties to file additional briefs by May 11 on whether they can still move ahead. The parties wrote to the justices to the justices indicating they would be pleased to do so if requested.

It marks the second time the court has asked for additional briefing in the case. The justices similarly questioned their jurisdiction after the state court agreed to rehear the case.

  • InevitableSwing [none/use name]
    hexagon
    ·
    1 year ago

    I chose another article by her at random. It's like the written equivalent of flicking fluorescent lighting that's giving you a headache. It's the same hard to parse text, and in addition there is the problem of run on sentences with too many comas, inserted oddly and maybe a semicolon; plus it's a worse than AI written text as she seems intent on never putting words in an order that flows smoothly.

    archive.today • Opinion | Joe Biden's Greatest Strength Is Also His Greatest Vulnerability - The New York Times

    If he runs for this second term, squarely in this space of all these contradictions, Mr. Biden is making the same ask as he did during the 2020 election — to trust him, to trust that he will be proven right about himself. Qualitatively, Mr. Biden represents familiarity and stability, which both derive from his age and sit in uneasy tension with it.

    There is something weird and hinky at play. Maybe she's the faildaugther of somebody very important or at least very important to the NYT. Or she's in a sexual relationship with somebody in power there. Or both?