READ MORE HERE
Saturday, February 27, 2016
The Endorsement Primary
READ MORE HERE
Monday, February 22, 2016
A background guide to “Brexit” from the European Union
David Cameron,
Britain’s Conservative prime minister, is partly responsible. Although he has
repeatedly urged his party to stop “banging on about Europe”, his Eurosceptic
backbenchers, scared witless by the rise of Nigel Farage’s virulently anti-EU
UK Independence Party (UKIP), have constantly hassled him to adopt a tougher
line with Brussels. His response has generally been to appease them. One early
morsel he threw them was the 2011 European Union Act, which requires any
EU-wide treaty that passes substantive new powers to Brussels to be put to a
British referendum. That sounded like a big concession, but no new treaties
were then in prospect. In January 2013, Mr Cameron promised that, if the Tories
were re-elected in May 2015, he would renegotiate Britain’s membership and hold
an in-out referendum by the end of 2017.
Following his election victory in May
2015, the prime minister claimed to have embarked on a renegotiation to fix
what he says is wrong with the EU. Yet he was deliberately vague about
what changes he wants, partly for fear that if his shopping list leaks Eurosceptics
in his own party will rubbish it as inadequate. At the European summit on
October 15th-16th, however, he was told by his fellow heads of government to
produce a list of precise demands in November if there was to be any chance of
the negotiations being concluded, as he at one time hoped, at the December
European summit. He did produce a list of demands but a deal still eludes him.
The prime minister is now hopeful of getting an agreement by the end of
February.
Saturday, February 13, 2016
Can Republicans really block Obama’s Supreme Court nomination for a year? Probably.
Come January 2017, Republicans have a
chance at controlling the House of Representatives, the Senate and the White
House.
So it stands to reason that Republicans
have very little incentive to even consider President Obama's suggestion for
who should replace Justice Antonin Scalia, who died
Saturday.

It's known as the "Thurmond
Rule," for reasons we'll get into, but there is widespread
disagreement on what it even means and when it can be invoked.
"It's not a rule," said
Russell Wheeler, a judicial expert with the Brookings Institution. "It's
just sort of a pie-in-the-sky flexibility that both parties try to disown when
it's convenient for them and try to say it means something when it's not."
Whether rule or tradition, it pops
up throughout history in times like these, when a high-stakes judicial nomination
collides with a presidential election.
But Wheeler and other congressional
experts think the rule is less in-play now than in the
past. Republicans have control of the Senate and can simply sit on
the nomination if they want -- no matter how much the other side cries foul.
Wheeler said the argument they can
make to do that is less about a somewhat-arcane parliamentary
tradition and more about whether it's fair to consider a life-time
judicial nominee by a lame-duck president before such a pivotal presidential
election.
READ MORE HERE
READ MORE HERE
What happens to this Term’s close cases?
The
passing of Justice Scalia of course affects the cases now before the
Court. Votes that the Justice cast in cases that have not been publicly
decided are void. Of course, if Justice Scalia’s vote was not necessary
to the outcome – for example, if he was in the dissent or if the majority
included more than five Justices – then the case will still be decided, only by
an eight-member Court.

The most
immediate and important implications involve that union case. A
conservative ruling in that case is now unlikely to issue.
Other significant cases in which the Court may now be equally divided include Evenwel v. Abbott (on the meaning of the “one person,
one vote” guarantee), the cases challenging the accommodation for religious
organizations under the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate, and the
challenge to the Obama administration’s immigration policy.
The Court is also of course
hearing a significant abortion case, involving multiple restrictions adopted by
Texas. In my estimation, the Court was likely to strike those provisions
down. If so, the Court would still rule – deciding the case with eight
Justices.
Conversely, the Court was likely
to limit affirmative action in public higher education in the Fisher case.
But because only three of the liberal Justices are participating
(Justice Kagan is recused), conservatives would retain a narrow majority.
There is also recent precedent
for the Court to attempt to avoid issuing a number of equally divided
rulings. In Chief Justice Roberts’s first Term, the Court in similar
circumstances decided a number of significant cases by instead issuing
relatively unimportant, often procedural decisions. It is unclear if the
Justices will take the same approach in any of this Term’s major, closely
divided cases.
Replacing Antonin Scalia’s will be a profound test of the American political system
The test
is simple. Can divided government actually govern, given today's more polarized
parties? In the past, it could. In 1988, a presidential election year, a
Democratic Senate unanimously approved President Ronald Reagan's nomination of
Anthony Kennedy to the Supreme Court. The Senate wasn't passive; it had
previously rejected Reagan's initial nominee, Robert Bork, and his second
choice Douglas Ginsburg dropped out of the running. However, it ultimately did
its job — even amidst an election and divided party control of the government.
But
moments after reports first filtered out of Scalia's death, and with no
knowledge of who President Obama planned to name as Scalia's replacement,
senior Republicans said they wouldn't even consider an appointment from Obama,
despite the fact that he has almost a year left in his presidency.
Ted Cruz
was first to voice this opinion, but it was Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell's statement that carried the most consequence. "The American
people should have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court
Justice," he said. "Therefore, this vacancy should not be filled
until we have a new president."
The
American people, of course, already did have a voice in the selection of
Scalia's replacement. They reelected Barack Obama to office in 2012. But they
also made Mitch McConnell majority leader in 2014.
Tuesday, January 5, 2016
Emotional Obama calls for 'sense of urgency' to fight gun violence
CNN)President Barack Obama grew
emotional Tuesday as he made a passionate call for a national "sense of
urgency" to limit gun violence.
He was
introduced by Mark Barden, whose son Daniel was killed in the 2012 massacre at
Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut. Obama circled back to that
shooting in the final moments of his speech.
"Every
time I think about those kids, it gets me mad," Obama said, pausing to
wipe away tears.
He
added: "And by the way, it happens on the streets of Chicago every
day," referring to his hometown where he began his political career.
The
White House is introducing a new requirement that would expand background
checks for buyers. The measure mandates that individuals "in the business
of selling firearms" register as licensed gun dealers, effectively
narrowing the so-called "gun show loophole," which exempts most small
sellers from keeping formal sales records.
Former Congresswoman and gun
control advocate Gabby Giffords, who was seriously injured in a 2011 mass
shooting, was also in attendance at Tuesday's event and was greeted with a
standing ovation from the White House audience.
Monday, January 4, 2016
The Oregon occupiers’ land dispute, explained in 9 maps

But
there's also the very particular question of how much land the government
controls in the state -- the same question that animated the dispute with rancher
Cliven Bundy in Nevada two years ago -- and that helped
motivate Bundy's son Ammon to take a lead role in the Oregon standoff.
As we noted Sunday,
the Oregon dispute began with the government's push to ensure that Dwight and
Steven Hammond, a father and son who were convicted of arson in 2012, served
the minimum sentences that their convictions mandated. (Both already have
served time, but less than the five-year minimum.) The Hammonds set a fire in
2001 that spread out of control on federal land. The government argued that the
two were trying to cover up an illegal deer hunt.
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