So last night I listened to the first tg argument while watching hockey. What can I say - a bit of a quiet night. A few observations.
On to the wv case on the drive home tonight
- Recall that there are 2 cases, Idaho, involving a college aged person, and wv, involving a young person. Idaho was constitutional, wv a title 9 claim.
- Idaho atty was really good and fantastically prepared. Made a point of answering the questions even when diverted or interrupted. SG and plaintiff’s attorney were ok but nothing to write home about. Overall the justices seemed to be better behaved than usual in terms of interruptions and the like, including Alito and Soto.
- Mootness. In Idaho the plaintiff sought to dismiss once the supremes granted cert. ostensibly because of attention, but probably for fear of a bad outcome. Soto was the only one who bit on mootness and was a real wiener about it, citing the horrific impact on one’s life having a scotus case which you brought named after you. A little late to think of that.
- Kagan had interesting inquiries right out of the gate about whether in ep litigation “as applied” challenges are viable. I actually think she was struggling with the case a bit. For a while I was having a hard time sorting through all of the arguments on this. In essence the state said that in sex oriented cases, you evaluate the sex based classification (here, boys and girls sports due to competitive advantage) generally under intermediate scrutiny. Plaintiff said no, if on an exceptions basis the particular plaintiff didn’t have advantages (eg due to hormonal interventions) then the classification has to be more narrowly tailored. Once I sort of heard the plaintiffs attorney, it really seemed to me like the argument was a shell game to create a back door to turning an intermediate scrutiny case into a strict scrutiny case (the standard for race).
- A little surprised at the absence of much discussion on why the state law doesn’t preclude girls from playing boys sports.
- One thing that did seem clear to me was that we are not getting a new “protected class” out of this (ie, TG is not a distinct protected class relative to sex).
- While many press pieces suggested Gorsuch and kav showed their cards strongly to the state, I don’t think it was as strong as was suggested. Maybe Kav a little.
- Notably, none of the parties took a position on whether the ep clause compels states to limit tg participation.
Pt. 4 rolls back to the science question. Has it been answered? Does hormonal intervention actually mitigate supposed advantages? Is that even relevant to the argument at this point? You may have alluded to that in your earlier post.
Pt. 5 has always been of interest to me. Perhaps because I have a daughter. Perhaps me being in the military.
Pt. 6 If TG is not a protected class, is a case arguing discrimination brought under scientific or identity based gender?