Author Topic: Justices add three new hours of argument to calendar  (Read 775 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Online Elderberry

  • TBR Contributor
  • *****
  • Posts: 24,448
Justices add three new hours of argument to calendar
« on: January 18, 2020, 04:07:32 pm »
SCOTUSblog by Amy Howe 1/17/2020

This afternoon the Supreme Court issued orders from the justices’ private conference earlier today. The justices granted six new cases – three pairs of consolidated cases – for a total of three additional hours of argument.

With the announcement that they have agreed to review Little Sisters of the Poor Saints Peter and Paul Home v. Pennsylvania and Trump v. Pennsylvania, the justices will return to the battle over the Affordable Care Act’s birth-control mandate, which generally requires employers to provide their female employees with health insurance that includes access to certain forms of birth control. In 2013, the federal government exempted churches and other religious institutions from having to comply with the rule, and it provided an “opt-out” process to accommodate religious nonprofits that objected to having to comply with the mandate. In 2016, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in a challenge by religious nonprofits to the mandate and the accommodation process, but after the death of Justice Antonin Scalia the court sent the cases back to the lower courts with instructions for the federal government and the challengers to try to work out a solution that would allow female employees to receive full contraceptive coverage while still respecting the employers’ religious beliefs.

The cases that the justices agreed to hear today arose after the federal government – now under President Donald Trump – issued new rules in 2017 that expanded the exemption from the mandate and allowed private employers with religious or moral objections to the mandate to opt out of providing coverage for their employees without any notice. Pennsylvania and New Jersey went to court to block the new rules, arguing that they violated the Affordable Care Act and the federal laws governing administrative agencies. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit upheld a district court ruling that barred the government from enforcing the rules nationwide, and both the federal government and the Little Sisters of the Poor, a Catholic religious group that works with the elderly, asked the justices to review that ruling. The justices agreed to weigh in on the expansion of the exemption, as well as the Little Sisters’ legal right to appeal the lower court’s decision invalidating the rule and whether the 3rd Circuit should have upheld the nationwide injunction.

In Chiafolo v. Washington and Colorado Department of State v. Baca, the justices will consider the constitutionality of “faithless elector” laws, which require presidential electors to vote the way state law directs. The petitioner in the Washington case, Peter Chiafolo, was elected as a presidential elector when Hillary Clinton won that state’s popular vote in 2016 but voted for Colin Powell instead, which led to a $1,000 fine for violating a state law that required him to vote for the presidential and vice-presidential candidates who won the majority of the popular votes. The respondent in the Colorado case, Micheal Baca, was removed as an elector after he attempted to vote for John Kasich, even though Clinton won the popular vote in Colorado as well. Chiafolo told the justices that the question has real-world importance in the run-up to the 2020 presidential election: In 2016, he noted, “ten of the 538 presidential electors either cast presidential votes other than the nominees of their party” or tried to do so but were replaced. A similar swing would “have changed the results in five of fifty-eight prior elections,” he added.

More: https://www.scotusblog.com/2020/01/justices-add-three-new-hours-argument-calendar/#more-291338

Offline sneakypete

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 52,963
  • Twitter is for Twits
Re: Justices add three new hours of argument to calendar
« Reply #1 on: January 18, 2020, 05:04:47 pm »
I'm a little slow today,so bear with me.

Am I correct in assuming somebody is suing the little sisters of the poor for not providing birth control for nuns?

If true,this must be one of the most bizarre law suits I have ever heard of,and not only should the lawyers suing be disbarred,they should be bitch-slapped in public until the cry everywhere they appear.
Anyone who isn't paranoid in 2021 just isn't thinking clearly!

Online Elderberry

  • TBR Contributor
  • *****
  • Posts: 24,448
Re: Justices add three new hours of argument to calendar
« Reply #2 on: January 18, 2020, 05:36:57 pm »
The coming Supreme Court showdown over birth control

Justice Scalia’s death delayed a reckoning. Now the fight over contraception is back.
Vox By Ian Millhiser Updated Jan 17, 2020

https://www.vox.com/2020/1/14/21059931/supreme-court-birth-control-religious-liberty-pennsylvania-little-sisters

Quote
The Supreme Court announced on Friday that it will hear Trump v. Pennsylvania and Little Sisters of the Poor Saints Peter and Paul Home v. Pennsylvania, two consolidated cases examining the Trump administration’s rules allowing virtually any employer to deny birth control coverage to its employees.

The cases reignite a legal conflict over the rights of employers who object to contraception on religious grounds. This conflict raged throughout much of the Obama administration, then briefly simmered down after Justice Antonin Scalia’s death temporarily stripped conservatives of the Supreme Court majority they needed to expand the rights of religious employers.

The core question in the Pennsylvania cases, however, is not whether the Constitution gives such religious objectors a right to deny contraceptive coverage to their employees. Rather, it’s whether the Trump administration acted properly when it wrote a sweeping exemption into regulations requiring employers to include birth control coverage in employee health plans.

The Trump administration’s rules permit many employers to ignore the requirement to provide birth control coverage to their employees if the employer expresses either a religious or a “moral” objection to contraception. A federal appeals court struck down these rules.

How we got here

Until fairly recently, the general rule in “religious liberty” cases was that people of faith may sometimes seek exemptions from laws they object to on religious grounds, but they could not claim an exemption that would undercut the rights of a third party. This was especially true in the business context. As the Supreme Court held in United States v. Lee (1982), “when followers of a particular sect enter into commercial activity as a matter of choice, the limits they accept on their own conduct as a matter of conscience and faith are not to be superimposed on the statutory schemes which are binding on others in that activity.”

More at link.

Offline txradioguy

  • Propaganda NCOIC
  • Cat Mod
  • *****
  • Posts: 23,534
  • Gender: Male
  • Rule #39
Re: Justices add three new hours of argument to calendar
« Reply #3 on: January 21, 2020, 04:08:38 am »
I'm a little slow today,so bear with me.

Am I correct in assuming somebody is suing the little sisters of the poor for not providing birth control for nuns?


If true,this must be one of the most bizarre law suits I have ever heard of,and not only should the lawyers suing be disbarred,they should be bitch-slapped in public until the cry everywhere they appear.

IIRC it's the Federal Government that took Little Sisters of the Poor to court for not providing birth control to nuns in their health insurance.
The libs/dems of today are the Quislings of former years. The cowards who would vote a fraud into office in exchange for handouts from the devil.

Here lies in honored glory an American soldier, known but to God

THE ESTABLISHMENT IS THE PROBLEM...NOT THE SOLUTION

Republicans Don't Need A Back Bench...They Need a BACKBONE!

Offline sneakypete

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 52,963
  • Twitter is for Twits
Re: Justices add three new hours of argument to calendar
« Reply #4 on: January 21, 2020, 04:25:24 am »
IIRC it's the Federal Government that took Little Sisters of the Poor to court for not providing birth control to nuns in their health insurance.

@txradioguy

Just when you start to think there has to be a limit on stoopid,something like this happens.

There HAS to be a name attached to the original complaint,even if it is some just some department head in the Civil Rights division. Whoever it is,should have his or her name published and spread widely,so that people can just slap the snot out of them everywhere they appear.
Anyone who isn't paranoid in 2021 just isn't thinking clearly!

Offline verga

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 9,712
  • Gender: Male
Re: Justices add three new hours of argument to calendar
« Reply #5 on: January 21, 2020, 01:52:21 pm »
BKMK
In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
�More than any other time in history, mankind faces a crossroads. One path leads to despair and utter hopelessness. The other, to total extinction. Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose correctly.�-Woody Allen
If God invented marathons to keep people from doing anything more stupid, the triathlon must have taken him completely by surprise.