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Adam Liptak

4episodes
2podcasts

Featured On 2 Podcasts

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4 episodes
The Daily (NYT)

Inside the Five Days That Remade the Supreme Court

The Daily (NYT)
32 minNew York Times Supreme Court Correspondent

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS NYT reporters Jodi Kantor and Adam Liptak reveal 16 pages of confidential Supreme Court correspondence showing how five days of private justice-to-justice memos in February 2016 — centered on Obama's Clean Power Plan — created the shadow docket system now reshaping presidential power across immigration, spending, and agency regulation. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Shadow Docket vs. Merits Docket:** The standard Supreme Court merits process involves multiple briefing rounds, oral arguments, in-person deliberations, and 10–15 draft exchanges over roughly one year, producing reasoned opinions up to 100 pages long. The shadow docket bypasses every step, producing rulings in days with little or no written reasoning — and the court has used it 20 times in one year alone. - **Partisan voting amplification:** Political scientists find measurably higher partisan voting on the shadow docket than on the merits docket. Republican-appointed justices vote more consistently along party lines under time pressure. A concrete example: the court ruled against Biden on three emergency applications, then ruled in Biden's favor on all three when those same cases returned through full merits deliberation. - **Nominally temporary, practically permanent:** Shadow docket orders are framed as temporary holds while litigation continues, but their real-world consequences are often irreversible. When the court permits deportations, aid withholding, or mass firings under emergency orders, reversing those outcomes — even if the court later rules differently — becomes practically impossible, making the "temporary" framing functionally misleading. - **Institutional legitimacy tied to written reasoning:** Supreme Court legitimacy rests on justices showing their work through written opinions, since justices are unelected and serve for life. As shadow docket use expands and unexplained rulings multiply, public trust erodes. The court's approval ratings are already at recorded lows, and continued reliance on brief, unreasoned emergency orders accelerates that decline. - **Roberts memo reveals non-legal motivations:** Chief Justice Roberts' opening memo explicitly cited frustration with EPA's behavior after a mercury-emissions ruling, arguing the agency had rendered a prior court decision meaningless. Recognizing this pattern, understand that shadow docket decisions can be driven by institutional grievance and power-struggle dynamics — factors never disclosed in the sparse public orders that emerge from the process. → NOTABLE MOMENT The most revealing detail: Justice Kennedy's memo — the decisive fifth vote that launched the entire shadow docket era — consisted of just three sentences with no substantive reasoning. A single brief note from one persuadable justice, written in five days, permanently altered how America's highest court operates. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Supreme Court, Shadow Docket, Judicial Transparency, Executive Power, Constitutional Law

The Daily (NYT)

Special Episode: Trump's Tariffs Struck Down

The Daily (NYT)
16 minNew York Times Supreme Court Correspondent

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS The Supreme Court rules 6-3 in February that Trump's tariffs imposed under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act are illegal, with NYT legal correspondent Adam Liptak analyzing the ruling's implications for presidential power and economic policy. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Statutory language matters:** The IEEPA ruling hinged on the absence of the word "tariffs" in the 1977 statute. Chief Justice Roberts concluded that "regulation of importation" — separated from relevant context by 16 other words — cannot legally authorize presidential tariff powers. - **Conservative court fracture:** The 6-3 split broke along unexpected lines: Roberts, Gorsuch, and Barrett joined the three liberal justices in the majority, while Thomas, Alito, and Kavanaugh dissented — signaling that Trump's judicial appointees are not uniformly deferential to his executive agenda. - **Alternative tariff authority exists:** Trump retains tariff power under Section 232 (national security) and Section 301 statutes, which explicitly name tariffs. These tools are narrower and more time-limited than IEEPA, functioning as a scalpel rather than the blunt instrument previously used. - **Refund litigation incoming:** Businesses that paid now-invalidated tariffs face an unresolved legal landscape. Some have already filed suits seeking reimbursement, but the majority opinion offers no guidance — and companies that passed costs to consumers may benefit twice if refunds are granted. → NOTABLE MOMENT Liptak notes that Trump publicly called majority justices unpatriotic and disloyal at a press conference, raising the prospect of an unprecedented confrontation when justices traditionally attend the State of the Union address days later. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Supreme Court, Presidential Power, Trade Policy, Separation of Powers

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS New York Times Supreme Court reporter Adam Liptak examines Article Three of the Constitution, which establishes the judicial branch. The discussion covers what the Constitution omits about the courts, including judicial review, the Supreme Court's size, and term limits. Topics include the Roberts Court's legacy, the shadow docket, congressional power over courts, and challenges facing judicial independence. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Congressional Authority Over Courts:** Congress can set Supreme Court size through simple legislation without constitutional amendment. The court has ranged from five to ten justices, currently stable at nine since the mid-1800s. Congress also controls jurisdiction stripping, determining which case types federal courts can hear, though this power remains largely untested due to political norms and public resistance to such interventions. - **Life Tenure Problem:** The United States stands alone among developed nations without mandatory retirement ages or term limits for federal judges. This creates political gamesmanship where justices strategically retire under ideologically aligned presidents. Implementing term limits requires constitutional amendment, making this widely supported reform nearly impossible to achieve, while expanding court size only needs congressional majorities. - **Shadow Docket Mechanics:** Emergency applications bypass normal Supreme Court procedures with thin briefing, no oral arguments, and decisions within weeks rather than months. The Trump administration wins the vast majority of these cases. Orders often lack reasoning or provide minimal explanation, yet lower courts must treat them as binding precedent. This process undermines judicial legitimacy by removing the reasoned analysis that distinguishes courts from political branches. - **Judicial Review Origins:** Marbury v. Madison established judicial review in 1803, though this power appears nowhere in Article Three's six paragraphs. Chief Justice John Marshall initially positioned the court as one interpreter among three branches, not the exclusive authority. Only later, in Cooper v. Aaron, did the court declare judicial supremacy, consolidating power to issue final constitutional interpretations binding on all parties nationwide. - **Standing Doctrine Inconsistency:** The Roberts Court applies standing requirements unpredictably based on case outcomes. A website designer won her case despite never creating websites or receiving requests from same-sex couples. Missouri gained standing in student loan cases through an independent nonprofit's theoretical losses. Meanwhile, immigration enforcement challenges face strict standing barriers. This selective application suggests outcome-driven rather than principled jurisprudence. - **Clerk Influence Structure:** Each justice employs four recent law school graduates, typically from Harvard or Yale, who draft first opinions and evaluate petitions for review. A single 26-year-old clerk in the cert pool makes preliminary recommendations affecting whether the Supreme Court hears cases. Three current justices clerked for their predecessors, creating an inherited aristocracy nowhere contemplated in Article Three's text or the founders' anti-nobility principles. → NOTABLE MOMENT Adam Liptak reveals that Chief Justice Roberts, once a strict standing hawk who insisted plaintiffs demonstrate direct injury, recently authored an opinion allowing a political candidate to challenge late mail ballots with questionable standing. This reversal exemplifies how the court applies procedural doctrines opportunistically rather than consistently, undermining claims that neutral legal principles rather than desired outcomes drive decisions. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Constitutional Law, Supreme Court, Judicial Review, Shadow Docket, Article Three, Separation of Powers

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS The Supreme Court heard arguments challenging President Trump's authority to impose sweeping tariffs under emergency powers law IEEPA, with justices expressing skepticism that the statute authorizes such broad taxation without explicit congressional approval. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Statutory interpretation challenge:** IEEPA allows the president to regulate importation during emergencies but never mentions tariffs, duties, or taxes explicitly. Multiple justices questioned whether Congress would hide such massive taxing authority in ambiguous language rather than stating it directly. - **Major questions doctrine application:** The court's recent principle requires plain congressional authorization for actions with vast economic consequences. These tariffs involve trillions of dollars yet rely on a statute never used for tariffs in its fifty-year history, failing the clarity test. - **Foreign policy exemption rejected:** The administration argued the major questions doctrine does not apply to foreign affairs. Justice Sotomayor countered that tariffs are domestic taxes on American businesses, not purely diplomatic tools, making them subject to congressional taxing power under Article One. - **Nondelegation concerns raised:** Justice Gorsuch warned that accepting broad delegation creates a one-way ratchet where presidents accumulate power Congress cannot reclaim without supermajority votes to override vetoes. He questioned where limits exist if Congress can hand over war declaration and taxation authority. → NOTABLE MOMENT Justice Amy Coney Barrett repeatedly pressed the government lawyer to cite any historical example where Congress conferred tariff authority without explicitly mentioning tariffs, and the lawyer could not provide one, undermining the administration's entire statutory interpretation argument. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Executive Power, Trade Policy, Constitutional Law, Supreme Court

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