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Marc Elliott's avatar

Every lawyer who follows this sort of thing knows that Humphrey’s Executor is on life-support, and the conservative justices would love to put it out out of its misery. But the smarter thing to do as a matter of procedure and of precedent is to reject the motion because TROs not immediately appealable, and to let this case work its way back up to the Supreme Court after further litigation.

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Thomas D. Edmondson's avatar

Thank you for this nuanced look at the OSC case. But Press Secretary Leavitt's blunderbuss assertion that Trump "is the executive of the executive branch and, therefore, he has the power to fire anyone within the executive branch that he wishes to,” https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/01/31/trump-federal-workers-executive-orders/, may weigh pretty heavily as a key to where the administration is coming from.

And although the Supreme Court has sometimes moved incrementally to achieve its goals, e.g., re cases involving public funding of religious schools, in other cases it has gone further faster than it needed to, e.g., in both the Jan. 6 obstruction and immunity cases. In the latter two cases, however, Justice Barrett objected to the majority's overreaching, https://www.npr.org/2024/07/02/nx-s1-5026959/supreme-court-term, so her vote to go whole hog on the unitary executive doctrine now is not a sure thing.

Bottom line: Could go either way, as Prof. Vladeck says. As Emily Latella said, never mind ... . :>)

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