A couple of interesting orders this morning, boys and girls.
First, in light of the first circuit's denial of the stay in the snap case, KJB issued an order requiring the administration to state whether they intended to seek a scotus stay, and setting any supp briefing for 4pm today and 0800 tomorrow for the states' response. The feds indicated they will be seeking a stay, but it'll be really interesting to see what they request. It might well be something limited given the political movement within the senate on the appropriations front.
Second, despite fearmongering from some corners, the court declined the cert petition inviting them to revisit gay marriage and Obergfell. Lots of good reasons for that, but I will note that as unsympathetic a plaintiff as Kim Davis was in the case, she does end up caught between a weird rock and hard place given the way the case arose -- a judgment of personal liability against her for failure to take an official action.
Third, the court did take up a really important election law case -- basically, whether federal law requires that ballots actually be received by (not just mailed by) election day to be counted. Personally, I kinda hate mail voting generally in that the ritual of actually giving enough of a **** to get your *** to the pollling place underscores the importance of the privilege you are exercising. But I have a hard time seeing a receipt day as federally/constitutionally mandated on the legal front, and I don't buy the paranoid argument that allowing a few extra days for mail delays somehow undercuts confidence in voting integrity.
And finally, as a bonus, a Gorsuch dissent from a denial of cert in an Indian law case - always a wonderful read.