Raquel Dominguez , Sarah Mahmood  //  7/20/17  //  Daily Update


The Supreme Court stayed portions of the district court travel ban order regarding refugees, but declined to enjoin provisions concerning relatives.  President Trump regrets appointing Attorney General Jeff Sessions given Sessions’ decision to recuse himself from the Russia investigation.  Jared Kushner will testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee on ties to Russia.  President Trump is working to transform the judiciary.

 

IMMIGRATION

In litigation over the revised travel ban, the Supreme Court stayed portions of Judge Watson’s order granting relief to refugees, but declined to block relief concerning relatives (WaPo, NYT, WSJ). 

  • The Government’s motion is here.
  • Hawaii’s opposition is here.
  • The Government’s reply is here.
  • The Supreme Court’s order is here.
  • The Supreme Court has become a co-author and co-owner of the travel ban, warns Joshua Matz at Take Care.
  • Marty Lederman examines the Government’s reply brief at Take Care.
  • Amy Howe summarizes the issues at SCOTUSblog.
  • Peter Margulies analyzes the Supreme Court’s order at Lawfare.
  • Lyle Denniston outlines the decision’s implications at Law News.
  • Ilya Somin explores the refugee issue in the Washington Post.

Political exigencies historically have shaped definitions of families in immigration law, observes Mae Ngai at the New York Times.

 

DEMOCRACY

President Trump’s Commission on Election Integrity held its first public meeting (NYT, LA Times, Politico, The Hill).

 

SAFETY AND JUSTICE

Congresswoman Maxine Waters called for the recusal of Attorney General Jeff Sessions from the DOJ investigation into Deutsche Bank (The Hill).

Attorney General Sessions released new guidance expanding federal asset forfeiture programs (AP, The Hill).

  • The new guidance is here.
  • The Attorney General’s order is here.
  • The DOJ press release is here.
  • Kanya Bennett with the ACLU objects to the new policy as unjust.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson reportedly is planning to eliminating the Office of the Coordinator for Cyber Issues (The Hill).

 

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

Former White House ethics chief Walter Shaub believes President Trump is giving the appearance of profiting from the presidency (The Hill).

President Trump warned that investigating the Trump family finances is off limits to Special Counsel Robert Mueller (The Hill).

 

REGULATION

President Trump urged Senate Republicans to continue working on health care reform (NYT).

President Trump is undoing President Obama’s legacy in seven key areas (WaPo).

 

CHECKS & BALANCES

President Trump is successfully transforming the judiciary, writes Ronald Klain (WaPo).

Congress must investigate possible Russian interference in the 2016 Election even as Special Counsel Robert Mueller conducts his own investigation, argues Tim Farnsworth (POGO).

 

REMOVAL FROM OFFICE

Liberal House Democrats introduced a resolution of no confidence in President Trump (The Hill).

 

RUSSIAN INTERFERENCE

President Trump regrets appointing Attorney General Sessions in light of Sessions’ decision to recuse himself from the Russia investigation (NYT).

Paul Manafort, President Trump’s former campaign manager, was heavily in debt to pro-Russia interests before joining the Trump campaign (NYT).

Jared Kushner will testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee on ties to Russia (WaPo).

Andy Wright discusses the possibility that President Trump could grant pardons in connection with the Russia investigation at Just Security.

Beth Van Schaack at Just Security suggests that the Magnitsky Act, which garnered new publicity following the disclosure of Donald Trump, Jr.’s meeting, is underutilized.

 

And that's our update today!  Thanks for reading.  We cover a lot of ground, so our updates are inevitably a partial selection of relevant legal commentary.  

 

If you have any feedback, please let us know here.

 


Daily Update | December 23, 2019

12/23/19  //  Daily Update

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell seek to leverage uncertainties in the rules for impeachment to their advantage. White House officials indicated that President Trump threatened to veto a recent spending bill if it included language requiring release of military aid to Ukraine early next year. The DHS OIG said that it found “no misconduct” by department officials in the deaths of two migrant children who died in Border Patrol custody last year. And the FISA court ordered the Justice Department to review all cases that former FBI official Kevin Clinesmith worked on.

Emily Morrow

Harvard Law School

Daily Update | December 20, 2019

12/20/19  //  Daily Update

Speaker Nancy Pelosi indicated the House will be “ready” to move forward with the next steps once the Senate has agreed on ground rules, but the House may withhold from sending the articles to the Senate until after the new year. Commentary continues about the Fifth Circuit's mixed decision on the status of the ACA.

Emily Morrow

Harvard Law School

Daily Update | December 19, 2019

12/19/19  //  Daily Update

The House of Representatives voted to impeach President Trump. Some Democrats urge House leaders to withhold the articles to delay a trial in the Senate. Meanwhile, the Fifth Circuit issues an inconclusive decision about the future of the ACA, and DHS and DOJ proposed a new rulemaking to amend the list of crimes that bar relief for asylum seekers.

Emily Morrow

Harvard Law School