Abolish the Supreme Court Shadow Docket
Justice Kagan is right.

In April, the U.S. Supreme Court voted 5–4 to reinstate an Environmental Protection Agency rule promulgated during the Trump administration. Why? The majority did not explain, and it did not have to, because the case, Louisiana v. American Rivers, was decided on an emergency basis. Without receiving briefs on the merits from the parties or hearing oral arguments, the majority simply granted a motion to stay a lower court's decision.
Critics call emergency actions like this the "shadow docket." It is, as University of Chicago law professor William Baude describes it, "a range of orders and summary decisions that defy [the Court's] normal procedural regularity." The shadow docket's foremost foe is Justice Elena Kagan, who dissented in American Rivers, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor. "The Court goes astray," Kagan declared, by turning the emergency docket into "another place for merits designations—except made without full briefing and argument."
Kagan had a point. "No one can read the opinion unless the court writes it," George Washington University law professor Richard J. Pierce Jr. observed in a letter to The Wall Street Journal. "That is the problem with the shadow docket." The outcome in American Rivers may have been beautifully reasoned and correctly reached. But we have no way of fully assessing the decision, because the majority offered no rationale.
Until recently, complaints about the shadow docket have come mostly from liberal legal experts and activists, because the Court's biggest recent emergency interventions have mostly aligned with conservative policy preferences. But the politics flipped in May with the Court's emergency ruling in NetChoice v. Paxton. Without merits briefing or oral arguments, the Supreme Court prevented Texas from enforcing a law that would have compelled social media platforms like Twitter to host speech they do not want to host.
Many conservatives were unhappy about that. As Politico noted, "progressives outraged over the use of the Supreme Court's emergency 'shadow docket' to resolve legal fights over issues like abortion and immigration got some company this week from an unexpected group—conservative skeptics of the tech industry." It is "frankly ridiculous" that NetChoice, the trade group that challenged the Texas law, "is using the shadow docket," complained Rachel Bovard of the Conservative Partnership Institute. "It's so arrogant that they would put this in front of SCOTUS right now."
Now that conservatives are starting to realize that living by the shadow docket also means dying by the shadow docket, perhaps they will give Kagan's valid critique a second look.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Abolish the Shadow Docket."
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“Now that conservatives are starting to realize that living by the shadow docket also means dying by the shadow docket, perhaps they will give Kagan’s valid critique a second look.”
Funny that normal procedures like the ‘shadow docket” only becomes a problem that needs reform when it starts going regularly against the Left, like state legislature’s drawing legislative districts becoming unfair gerrymandering. There is also the problem political of activist groups venue shopping for the most radical lower courts to apply national stays or orders on policy and using the slowness of the Supreme Court to run out the clock on the administration that issued the order.
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With Biden reimplementing Obama WOTUS regarding water run off and EPA permitting, it may actually be another time for the shadow docket.
I'm more concerned with illegal federal actions going slowly through the courts and rules slightly changing to reset counters but keep the illegal rules. Sometimes expedited review is needed. Bidens school loan fiasco would have been an example if not held until review. A lot of damage can be done due to the slowness of the courts, and the democrats often brag about it.
Yeah, the administrative state pretty much has unlimited time. This only seems like it would leverage that unlimited time.
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Don’t call it the “shadow docket.” That’s accepting the terminology that opponents of it have used to make it seem sketchy or sneaky. Call it the emergency docket, or expedited docket, or hitch more accurately reflects what its purpose is.
It’s dangerous to adopt conclusory terminology. It leads you to dislike something based on what it’s called rather than what the thing does. See: Florida’s Parental Rights in Education bill.
It’s dangerous to adopt conclusory terminology.
Because it's not the docket The Court deserves, but the one it needs right now. It's a silent guardian, a watchful protector. A shadow docket.
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Root, in order to take the leftist position, ignores the real issue of abusing the shadow docket with non-emergencies versus it's existence.
To be fair, if these are important enough for SC intervention then imo the shadow docket should be temporary and the full case brought up in the next session.
Libertarians for added burueacratic hurdles!
Maybe. If it’s simple they should be able to provide a written smack down of the lower court, if it’s not then they should fit it into the docket proper to give it the consideration and explanation it deserves.
I wouldn't get rid of the emergency ruling option due to the time sensitivity and constraints but the SC should be the most transparent branch.
Yes, emergency rulings should be temporary.
Right you are. Has Kagan ever said anything sensible or insightful?
The trend now under Biden is to issue a snowstorm of orders and rejoice in what doesn't get stopped for unconstitutionality ( or takes time to wend its way through) and to blame the coursts for what is stopped.
Kagan wants Biden to have a freeway to Biden Utopia . Consider what bothers her and realize that what she complains about is what finally killed this idiot Biden Covid nonsense:
"“In the Trump years, people used to go to the Northern District of California, and in the Biden years, they go to Texas. It just can’t be right that one district judge can stop a nationwide policy in its tracks and leave it stopped for the years that it takes to go through the normal process.”"
So you're saying the Supreme Court shouldn't issue emergency rulings but just go ahead and double their case load? Sounds like we're going to need 9 more justices to form a second Supreme Court. I wonder who'll appoint those new justices.
If the justices considered the case long enough to issue an emergency ruling, then don't you think they've thought about it enough to write a page or two on why they ruled the way they did?
So why ever write more than "a page or two" on any decision? Then you can pick holes in all Supreme Court decisions for their lack of detail.
No, because you can know something is wrong without knowing what is right. This happens in REAL LIFE almost daily.
If you don't like shadow opinions, feel free to write your own.
Calling it the “shadow docket” is conclusive terminology. You’ve decided it’s a bad thing so you’ve given it a name that makes it sound sketchy. It’s framing the argument a certain way so you won’t listen to the alternative reasons that emergency actions exist.
You actually don’t need the Supreme Court to issue a written opinion when they’re just upholding the written opinion of a lower court. They are simply adopting that as their own. There’s too many cases and the Supreme Court is a slow process, so simply hearing some cases in a short timeframe where they don’t have to author opinions is a significant timesaver.
Calling it the “shadow docket” is conclusive terminology.
How about "The Shadow Clone Docket of The Nine Justice Court"?
Just to add, this one bugs me more than some others because it takes something libertarians might generally be in favor of (which is expediting the court process so it can bring closure to a case where there may be a critical time issue instead of having it stall out due to bureaucratic hurdles) and framing it in a way to make libertarians wary. Calling it a shadow docket as if it's conducted in secret like the FISA courts, or as if there's something sneaky about it. It's not sneaky or covert, it's simply an expedited way for the Court to provide relief by simply adopting a ruling by a lower court. The justification and oral arguments were already provided by that lower court, so the Court just issues an emergency stay or injunction.
I think having expedited hearings to grant relief or stays pending a final rulings is an important thing for the Supreme Court to do. It's not a surprise that Kagan doesn't like it because she's a stuffy intellectual who thinks every case needs her specific insight. I don't know why we should agree with her that the Supreme Court needs to slow things down to suit her sensibilities.
It is more than that. Left wing activists using radical judges in the lower courts using tortured reasoning to effect policy outside the control of the political branches has been standard operating procedure, especially for environmental issues. Kagan is upset that SCOTUS is doing oversight and squelching this tactic.
I'll go further and say this is mountain-making from molehills because the "shadow docket" doesn't decide the merits of anything. With a few exceptions, they are merely deciding procedural questions like whether it is appropriate to stay a decision until the merits have actually been decided.
Yep. The whole issue is pretty misleading.
Is it the most ideal solution? I don't know. But I don't like the inference that there's something nefarious about this. Making it seem like there's secret courts and hidden proceedings like the Star Chamber or FISA proceedings is just dishonest framing and not furthering the discussion.
Generally yes, although in the death penalty cases where they reverse a stay of execution, nobody is ever going to get to the merits because the case is moot when the guy dies (which of course is why a stay was granted by the lower courts in the first place.) In those cases, where they are obviously going to be the final say, perhaps they should find a different way to do things.
An emergency order necessarily is not fully reasoned because the court has not had full briefing and argument on the issue. It is an attempt to maintain some type of status quo ante until the issue can receive that full treatment. The justices may not even agree among themselves as to what the final resolution would be, only that this temporary emergency order is the best solution under the circumstances. Moreover, there is no reason to assume the lower court resolved the issue correctly if it is an issue meriting Supeme Court review. With respect to the death penalty orders, the Court receives all lower court filings for review before the case is formally presented to the Court, and those cases have already received multiple reviews from both state and federal courts, including the Supreme Court, before a case involving an active death warrant is presented to the Court. Death cases with an active warrant receive full consideration by the Court.
Never officially getting to the merits means no precedent ever is set, the lower courts might not even know what they got wrong, and SCOTUS doesn't have the benefit of an official lower court ruling. The case may have had multiple reviews, but probably *not* on the issue being presented.
"Calling it the “shadow docket” is conclusive terminology. You’ve decided it’s a bad thing so you’ve given it a name that makes it sound sketchy. It’s framing the argument a certain way so you won’t listen to the alternative reasons that emergency actions exist."
Agree. It's the same with the terms "Liberal" and "Conservative".
Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows!
They won't.
Indeed, now that there's some hope the Progressive aims might start being achieved through the shadow docket expect Progressive opposition to it to die down too.
So if congress passes a law requiring ALL supreme court actions be documented with an actual ruling, even of it is after the fact due to "an emergency", will the court rule that law unconstitutional?
Short of torches and pitchforks, how is the supreme court controlled?
Would it be constitutional to defund them?
Presumably if the supreme's ruled the action unconstitutional, they'd need to pass an amendment that says they have to do that.
Yes. Article III Section 1:
"The application for a stay presented to JUSTICE KAGAN and by her referred to the Court is granted. The district court’s October 21, 2021 order, insofar as it vacates the current certification rule, 40 C.F.R. Part 121, is stayed pending disposition of the appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and disposition of the petition for a writ of certiorari, if such a writ is timely sought. Should the petition for a writ of certiorari be denied, this order shall terminate automatically. In the event the petition for a writ of certiorari is granted, the order shall terminate upon the sending down of the judgment of this Court. "
Am I supposed to be outraged?
The Supreme Court here is not deciding on the merits of the case. It is deciding whether the lower court is following proper judicial procedure in issuing the order. Kagan is getting in a snit because the radicals on the lower court are getting reined in by SCOTUS oversight and being prevented from nixing a policy the Left does not like.
So, if you are not a progressive activist, no.
OK, the Liberal Justices area against it, I'm for it.
Ans shame on Reason for allowing such a pejorative headline.
>>Justice Kagan is right.
statement is a six-shooter idk if one of them should have been wasted on the emergency docket.
Environmental Protection isn't a Federally granted power.
SCOTUS is a HACK.
A *REAL* SCOTUS would rule the entire premise UN-Constitutional BECAUSE it is.. And EVERYONE knows it.
As long as the executive branch keeps violating the Constitution with impunity, given that it will take years for cases to wind through the regular legal process, emergency actions by SCOTUS are necessary.
Kagan would make an exception for death cases, though, which shows how bankrupt her position is.
Interesting that we want to put an end to this sort of ruling in an era where blatantly illegal and unconstitutional actions of our government are being endorsed by the courts via legal sleight of hand that would be aided by this change.
Look at DACA. The courts have said Obamas actions are illegal... but magically the Trump administration was not allowed to change it by the courts because it had been in place and people relied on it.
Magic.
The illegal becomes legal and the legal becomes illegal by the passage of time.
States illegally changed voting procedures and the courts did not allow challenges.... no standing.
Then, after the fact the courts did not allow challenges. Moot.
Now we have a procedure for knocking down these delaying tactics at the highest level on an expedited basis. But the court leans right. So the left wants to block the high court from getting involved, ensuring that the left leaning lower court gets to ratify illegal rulings and create facts on the ground for years as cases wind their way up the food chain.
That Kagan is the face of this movement is all you should need to know. Whatever her legal acumen, she is far and away the most nakely partisan member of the court. She is not even all that ideological in comparison to partisan. You should suspect that any position she takes has partisan advantage somewhere.
So, I'm wondering. If you're against the "shadow docket", are you also against judges issuing temporary injunctions in the first place? Are you against being able to appeal a grant or denial of a temporary injunction? Are you just against it being appealed to the Supreme Court in particular, for some reason, but would be OK with it being appealed to the 4th Circuit?
The shadow docket is just another name for matters taken up outside the normal appellate process. In many recent cases, these have been briefed and oral argument has been allowed. In even more written opinions are issued.
This approach effectively prevents problems with delay (e.g. rights are denied while justice is delayed) while preserving many advantages of the regular docket.
Is it possible that the court has made mistakes in how it has approached some shadow docket cases? Sure, but these are not inherent to the process of expedited review. How the court handles any specific matters should be evaluated on its own. Maybe the court should even adopt some rules or norms arouond how it deals with these cases.
But overall, having a court that acts faster is a good thing. It means less time in limbo for litigants and those waiting for a definitive ruling from the Supreme Court. It also allows the court to effectively take more cases.
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