Good morning boys and girls.
Today we get one or more opinions. Again, if I had to place bets on a "sexy" case, I'd bet on the Louisiana redistricting case.
And in that vein, I did take a little closer look at the NY redistricting stay from the other day. A couple of reactions...
1. Note that the state trial court actually issued its ruling on the basis of NY state law in holding that it was necessary to draw the map to create a 'crossover' district (ie, one in which racial minorities were not a majority but could elect their preferred candidate by attracting white voters, which also assumes that the minorities could "win" the relevant primary). Obviously NY courts can interpret NY law, but the SCOTUS stay of the opinion suggests that NY law violate the constitution as interpreted by the district court. In particular, Alito's (solo) concurrence may be something of a prelude to what we may see in LA -- the narrow construction to the efect that race-based districts are only permissible as an extraordinary remedy to address past discrimination, and even then have some shelf life.
2. There is a bit of a question about whether SCOTUS had jurisdiction to hear the case based on whether the NY CTA's denial of a stay represented a final state court decision; I tend to think they got this right, given the precedent cited and the nature of the request as a stay.
3. That said, where I think the majority did play fast and loose, and Soto very appropriately called them out - is in how the majority applied the Purcell principle (ie, that courts should not redraw/implement new districts at the last minute given the need for electoral stability/predictability for voters). Recall that this was a effectively an injunction case, so there is usually a need to show a strong need for extraordinary relief. Normally, Purcell has been applied when a state has redrawn a district, and after extended litigation, a court either blesses or curses that district, but there isn't enough time to roll out a new district before the election, so the Scotus orders them to default to the last one. Here though, the trial court ordered the redistricting commission to redraw a district, which they had not yet done. The majority/Alito asserted that Purcell could effectively be used as a sword rather than a shield to "prevent", up-front, the redistricting committee from drawing a questionable district, which might lose at a challenge at a later date that would be too close to the election to turn around. Clever, but imo dubious.