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Supreme Court

The Problem With the Supreme Court's 'Shadow Docket'

Plus: Did Mario Vargas Llosa write the world’s greatest political novel?

Damon Root | 7.22.2025 7:00 AM

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Supreme Court | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Midjourney
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Midjourney)

In May, the U.S. Supreme Court granted an emergency request by the Trump administration to allow President Donald Trump's firing of National Labor Relations Board member Gywnne Wilcox to go into effect while Wilcox's lawsuit against Trump played out in court.

Last week, the Supreme Court granted another emergency request by the Trump administration, this time allowing the firing of some 1,300 federal workers from the Department of Education to proceed while that lawsuit played out in court.

Can you identify the key difference between the two cases?

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Each one seemed to affirm the same broad view of presidential control over federal agencies—yet only one of them actually said so. In the first case, Trump v. Wilcox, the Supreme Court issued an opinion that both explained its decision and offered a legal justification for it. But in the second case, McMahon v. New York, the Court offered no explanation at all. That case only said that Trump's emergency request was granted and left it at that. (The same three justices, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, dissented in both cases.)

Why did the Supreme Court justify its order in one case while remaining silent in the other? The answer is that we simply don't know because a majority of the Court has declined to say.

Critics have dubbed this uncertain legal terrain "the shadow docket," a pejorative term that covers the various emergency orders and summary judgments that the Supreme Court sometimes issues on an expedited basis, all without the benefit of full briefing and oral arguments. In some instances, such as McMahon, a "shadow docket" ruling will not even include a written decision from the justices who made it.

The lack of any written decision is the part of all of this that has never sat well with me. The Supreme Court's emergency orders in Wilcox and McMahon both involved important questions of executive authority and both, at least on the surface, seemed to effectively resolve the matter in the president's favor, thus rendering any further litigation futile.

Yet we only have access to the majority's rationale in one of the two. In Wilcox, for example, the majority clearly said that Trump's firing of the agency official may go into effect because Trump "is likely" to prevail after the litigation has fully played out. Why did the majority expect such a likelihood of success? "Because the Constitution vests the executive power in the President," the Court's Wilcox order stated, "he may remove without cause executive officers who exercise that power on his behalf, subject to narrow exceptions recognized by our precedents." And in "our judgment," the order continued, "the Government is likely to show" that a NLRB board member qualifies as an officer who "exercise[s] considerable executive power."

Perhaps a similar expectation of ultimate success also explains why the administration's emergency request was granted in McMahon. But perhaps it doesn't. Perhaps there was another reason for the order. Yet only the Supreme Court can say for sure and the majority is pointedly not saying anything one way or the other. So, who knows if further litigation in McMahon is futile or not.

That kind of guessing game does a disservice to the rule of law.

Odds & Ends: What's Your Favorite Political Novel?

After the great Peruvian novelist and Nobel Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa died earlier this year, I was inspired to read or reread several of his books. I recently finished The Feast of the Goat (translated from the Spanish by Edith Grossman) and it is an incredible work of literature, even better than I remembered. I don't know if it is the greatest political novel ever written, but I do think it deserves to be in the running. (I would also cast a vote in this category for Robert Penn Warren's magnificent All the King's Men.)

The Feast of the Goat is a fictionalized account of the depraved regime of Rafael Trujillo, the right-wing dictator who ruled over the Dominican Republic from 1930 until his assassination in 1961. Much of the book is drawn from the historical record, although some key characters are entirely the work of the author's imagination. The novel's interlocking story lines partially follow the actions and thinking of Trujillo, and partially follow the actions and thinking of some of his victims, both real and fictional. The result is a haunted and haunting reckoning with a vile regime and its destructive hold on power.

Not exactly a cheerful book, to be sure, but I do highly recommend it.

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NEXT: Brickbat: Who Audits the Auditor?

Damon Root is a senior editor at Reason and the author of A Glorious Liberty: Frederick Douglass and the Fight for an Antislavery Constitution (Potomac Books).

Supreme CourtDonald TrumpTrump AdministrationCourtsLaw & Government
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  1. diver64   2 months ago

    Maybe SCOTUS thought that the written decision in one case dealing with federal employee(s) was clear enough that they didn't have to keep repeating themselves. Can the President in his role of head of the Executive Branch fire employees under his control? Yes, he can despite the lefts wailing about the permanent government jobs. The only question is if he is doing it following law. In my view all government jobs should be at will.

    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      This article seems to be a higher priority than the cost of an out of control political inferior court system full of judge shopping.

      1. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

        The "Shadow Docket" is throwing a monkey wrench into Root's cohorts attempts at exploiting the out of control inferior court system. That is Root's gripe.

        1. mad.casual   2 months ago

          +1 "MUH DEW PROCESS!"

        2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

          This. At this point I’m assuming Root hasn’t actually read the constitution, is too dumb to understand it, or is a liar.

      2. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

        How is a court making the Trump Administration comply with the Constitution and Federal Law "out of control"?

        1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

          The problem is making the judiciary comply with the constitution. That's kinda what the article is about. If the district courts stayed in their lane SCOTUS wouldn't be overturning them.

        2. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

          Would you be OK with the director of the Internal Revenue Submission Processing Center in Ogden, Utah, giving orders to the Supreme Court? No? It doesn't work the other way around, either.

    2. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

      Outlaw public employee unions.

      1. DesigNate   2 months ago

        This is the way.

  2. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

    "(The same three justices, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, dissented in both cases.)"

    That is rather damning for the Constitutional basis of their case for the groups opposing the Administration.

    1. Chumby   2 months ago

      They could henceforth be called the jeffmikesarc justices.

    2. mad.casual   2 months ago

      There's a certain irony in the majority of SCOTUS effectively voting a certain way, those three justices dissenting, and Root exclaiming "You can't do that! We need to see your papers!"

      Personally, I prefer the "Shadow Docket" approach. It pushes back against people like Damon Rootard's stupid spam/heckling/DOS activist litigation approach, obviates the "emanations an penumbras" horseshit, and leans hard into the "I'm not your Mom, I'm gonna let you learn for yourself what you did wrong."

      1. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

        Depends on how it's used but in the cases highlighted it just reiterates the point of the full case. Root is just pissed he and his Marxist allies cannot commit more lawfare with this in place. At this point they'd gone from critics to domestic enemies of the United States of America.

    3. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

      No. Those are all MAGA Justices who write opinions that are more at home at a gymnastics meet.

      1. DesigNate   2 months ago

        Yeah, John “Penaltax” Roberts is totally a MAGA justice.

        Congrats on maintaining your number 2 spot.

    4. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

      Isn't precedent the be-all and end-all? Shouldn't those three abide by the precedent set just months before?

      Of course, with no published decision or dissent, we'll never know.

  3. Chumby   2 months ago

    Fire all federal employees then have a draft where the ones actually wanted are picked and rehired. The many that are not selected can become free agents to pursue employment in local/state government or the private sector.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      have a draft

      Mandatory combine. You want your job back? Get your 40 under 5s, put up 2 plates over a dozen times, and broad jump 110". Then, maybe your old boss can hire you back. Otherwise, don't come back until you've got a >30" vertical.

      What does any of this have to do with your actual job function? Fuck you, we're the league *and* owners. You want the job, jump through the hoops for our amusement.

    2. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

      Any employee is a "free agent" pursue employment in local/state government or the private sector.

      1. Chumby   2 months ago

        The federal employees no longer deemed wanted by the current administration.

    3. damikesc   2 months ago

      Hell, vacate Kennedy and Nixon's executive order's that made public sector unions federally recognized.

  4. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

    The court was obligated to rule on these emergency requests why? Because the district courts continue to exceed their authority by issuing injunctions and TROs. Not having been briefed or hearing arguments the Court can't rule on the merits but when the Court indicates that the government is likely to prevail it is the inferior courts that are the obstacle to the rule of law. Root demands the the Court repeat it's reasoning every time some asshole judge decides that some frivolous argument puts them in charge of article 2. Hopefully at some point they'll shut down this shit show altogether but in the meantime there will be an endless stream of emergency requests.

  5. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

    "So, who knows if further litigation in McMahon is futile or not."

    Keep in mind, McMahon is about whether Trump can make staff reductions in a Department (specifically Education) without Congress's by your leave.

    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      The EO simply states to do the statutory minimum required by law. One would think a libertarian outlet would agree with that. But this rag seems to want the expanded powers of unelected bureaucracy instead.

      Now we had a judge yesterday demand the president violate congressional law and continue to fund planned parenthood.

      1. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

        They say the EO states to do the statutory minimum required by law, but that is not how it is being implemented.

        1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

          It hadn't been implemented when the inferior court TROed it. The plaintiffs challenged the EO itself which explicitly requires that it be enforced within the statutory framework. I'm sure these grifters will challenge the implementation once completed but it has not been found illegal and even the plaintiffs haven't claimed that outside of pure speculation so far.

  6. Rossami   2 months ago

    Your mistake is concluding that an emergency docket decision "thus render[s] any further litigation futile." The litigation continues. All the emergency docket decided in these cases was whether the standards of an injuction during the period while the trial continues were met. In both the cases you cite, they were not because the fired employees can be entirely made whole at the end of the trial by back-pay and compensation if they ultimately win.

    Emergency docket decisions are not merits decision.

  7. TJJ2000   2 months ago

    Damon Root sticks his head out to save the UN-Constitutional Dept of Education???

    This is the BS the commentary is complaining about. TDS has literally turned some authors on this magazine from Libertarians to Leftard-Shills. It's always been a little quasi Libertarian but what part of Libertarian supports the Dept of Education? I see RINO isn't specific to just the Republican party. LINO is just as prevalent if not more so since Trump came into the picture. Republicans are more Libertarian at this point than most authors at Reason.

    While the Supreme Court wasn't asked in this case if Congress even has the authority to build a [Na]tional So[zi]alist Indoctrination Camp for kids ... The very fact it has broken the Supreme Law (The Peoples Law over their government) should be more than enough to close the case and shut-down the department. That is precisely why the USA has a Supreme Court to begin with. To enforce the people's law over their government. Contrary to what Democrats and their 'Democracy' [WE] mob thinks. The USA is NOT a democracy. It is a *Constitutional* Republic.

  8. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

    The problem with the shadow docket is that it re-writes decades of Constitutional law without proper briefs, amicus briefs, augments, and detailed decisions.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

      Court didn't rule on the merits you tedious idiot. They didn't rewrite anything.

    2. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

      It is entirely procedural oversight of the lower courts which are entertaining specious suits to interfere in the workings of the Executive.

    3. TJJ2000   2 months ago

      The Constitution wasn't written within decades. It was written about 3-centuries ago. Your beloved [Na]tional So[zi]al[ism] empire isn't Constitutional no matter how much Treasonous 'Democracy/tics' in Congress ?think? it is. They know better; just like you do - they just don't care about what the USA is anymore because they want their [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire which really just equates to they want to STEAL endlessly what belongs to others. The "conquer and consume" mentality.

  9. Squirrelloid   2 months ago

    A couple things:
    1. The two cases are very different questions of law. The NLRB firing decision hinges on the NLRB member wielding significant executive power, and thus an officer of the united states under the direct control of the president. McMahon is about regular rank-and-file bureaucrats who are not officers of the united states and do not wield significant executive power. So the reason for the Wilcox decision cannot be the reason for McMahon. (And besides that, McMahon is ultimately about how congressional apportioned funding constrains executive actions, while Wilcox has no intersection with that question).
    2. Given there is no decision, it is reasonable to conclude that the court decided, if plaintiffs won in McMahon, backpay and reinstatement would remedy any alleged harms. This is typical in lawsuits over improper firing. But it would be nice if the court *said so*. (And in that case, continuing the lawsuit would not be futile, as it says nothing about the likelihood of the merits, just about the balance of equities involved).

  10. AT   2 months ago

    The lack of any written decision is the part of all of this that has never sat well with me.

    SCOTUS being bombarded with frivolous partisan-based lawsuits and USDC tomfoolery never sat well with me.

    You know as well as I do, Damon, that the Supreme Court doesn't exist to legislate. There aren't real Constitution questions being presented before them. The reason the DEI Hires (Sandy and Ketanji, I actually think Kagan is legit) keep dissenting - and publishing dissents to decisions without opinions - is because they think SCOTUS should be answering policy questions. (They are wrong.)

    You know as well as I do, Damon, that the SCOTUS resents the ever-living hell out of this policy stuff constantly being dumped on their doorstep.

    This is their response.

    It's not a shadow docket. It's SCOTUS telling every partisan dirtbag in America, "Stop wasting our time."

    Odds & Ends: What's Your Favorite Political Novel?

    Liberty's Last Stand

  11. JFree   2 months ago

    Well the farewell to Black Sabbath from last week's column by Damon Root was very timely after all. Ozzy Ozbourne died. Bats are now safer but their lives are less exciting.

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