Balkinization   |
Balkinization
Balkinization Symposiums: A Continuing List                                                                E-mail: Jack Balkin: jackbalkin at yahoo.com Bruce Ackerman bruce.ackerman at yale.edu Ian Ayres ian.ayres at yale.edu Corey Brettschneider corey_brettschneider at brown.edu Mary Dudziak mary.l.dudziak at emory.edu Joey Fishkin joey.fishkin at gmail.com Heather Gerken heather.gerken at yale.edu Abbe Gluck abbe.gluck at yale.edu Mark Graber mgraber at law.umaryland.edu Stephen Griffin sgriffin at tulane.edu Jonathan Hafetz jonathan.hafetz at shu.edu Jeremy Kessler jkessler at law.columbia.edu Andrew Koppelman akoppelman at law.northwestern.edu Marty Lederman msl46 at law.georgetown.edu Sanford Levinson slevinson at law.utexas.edu David Luban david.luban at gmail.com Gerard Magliocca gmaglioc at iupui.edu Jason Mazzone mazzonej at illinois.edu Linda McClain lmcclain at bu.edu John Mikhail mikhail at law.georgetown.edu Frank Pasquale pasquale.frank at gmail.com Nate Persily npersily at gmail.com Michael Stokes Paulsen michaelstokespaulsen at gmail.com Deborah Pearlstein dpearlst at yu.edu Rick Pildes rick.pildes at nyu.edu David Pozen dpozen at law.columbia.edu Richard Primus raprimus at umich.edu K. Sabeel Rahmansabeel.rahman at brooklaw.edu Alice Ristroph alice.ristroph at shu.edu Neil Siegel siegel at law.duke.edu David Super david.super at law.georgetown.edu Brian Tamanaha btamanaha at wulaw.wustl.edu Nelson Tebbe nelson.tebbe at brooklaw.edu Mark Tushnet mtushnet at law.harvard.edu Adam Winkler winkler at ucla.edu Compendium of posts on Hobby Lobby and related cases The Anti-Torture Memos: Balkinization Posts on Torture, Interrogation, Detention, War Powers, and OLC The Anti-Torture Memos (arranged by topic) Recent Posts The Roberts Court’s Unprecedented Abuse of Precedent – And How It Is Destroying the Judiciary’s Role in the System of Checks-and-Balances No Appeal, No Compliance, No Remedy E-Book of "The Actual Art Of Governing" Available for Pre-Order AAUP v. Rubio and the Big Chill Gaming Out the Appellate Void The Art of Replacing the Law with the Deal The Government Shutdown and the Filibuster Balkinization Symposium on Dylan C. Penningroth, Before the Movement-- Collected Posts Shutdown, You’d Better Take Care Virginia Is For Vengeance Symposium Response Part 2: Centering and de-centering race Symposium Response Part 1: The strange career of civil rights Balkinization Symposium on Serena Mayeri, Marital Privilege-- Collected Posts Oral Argument as Eulogy Response to Commentators Jawboning Late Night: A Lesson in How Corporate Consolidation Creates Free Speech Problems Marital Privilege and Immigration Law
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Wednesday, October 08, 2025
The Roberts Court’s Unprecedented Abuse of Precedent – And How It Is Destroying the Judiciary’s Role in the System of Checks-and-Balances
Guest Blogger
Bruce Ackerman On SSRN: From the days of the Federalist Papers and Marbury v. Madison, the Court’s commitment to reasoned elaboration of constitutional principle has served as the justification for its role in the system of checks-and-balances. Yet the very foundations of judicial legitimacy are at stake in two cases that the Roberts Court has scheduled for expedited consideration during the early months of its 2025-26 Term. These cases deal with the continuing legitimacy of Humphrey’s Executor’s unanimous decision upholding the constitutionality of “independent agencies” – most notably, the Federal Reserve and the Federal Trade Commission. This prospect has provoked a great deal of scholarly debate over the implications of relatively recent decisions by the Roberts Court on these issues. In contrast, my essay puts these decisions in a larger framework – emphasizing the crucial role played by the President and Congress in constructing “independent agencies” during the half-century preceding Humphrey’s unanimous decision upholding their constitutionality in 1935. It demonstrates that, after the breakthrough creation of the Interstate Commerce Commission by the Cleveland Administration, every President – from Theodore Roosevelt through Woodrow Wilson through Herbert Hoover – gained Congressional support for the creation of new independent agencies self-consciously organized to restrict presidential power in order to assure the deployment of impartial and expert regulation over crucial areas of socio-economic life. Justice Sutherland’s unanimous opinion of 1935 represents the self-conscious recognition of the legitimacy of this bipartisan affirmation of the role of expertise in modern government – and should not be cast aside without a principled confrontation with its historical foundations in American constitutional development. No Appeal, No Compliance, No Remedy
Andrew Coan
When a federal district judge blocked the Trump administration's National Guard deployment to Portland, Stephen Miller called the ruling a "legal insurrection," and influential MAGA personalities called for the President to ignore the court's order. Though the administration ultimately appealed, this rhetoric marks an escalation. After several months of relative moderation, the prospect of outright executive defiance of the courts appears to be growing. It is hard to predict exactly how such defiance would play out. But if the executive branch loses in district court and refuses to appeal, the Supreme Court would have no obvious vehicle to intervene and district judges few effective tools to enforce their own decisions. This “appellate void” is the product of several settled—and mostly pedestrian—jurisdictional rules, and the limits of the judicial contempt power. First and most fundamentally, a prevailing party generally cannot appeal. This rule is rooted in the case-or-controversy requirement of Article III. As the Supreme Court explained in Deposit Guaranty National Bank v. Roper, "A party who receives all that he has sought is generally not aggrieved by the judgment affording the relief and cannot appeal from it." A defendant's noncompliance with a district court judgment does not create appellate standing for a prevailing plaintiff. Of course, noncompliance does injure plaintiffs in the colloquial sense. But only an injury caused by the judgment itself creates standing to appeal. Mandamus ordering executive compliance might seem like the obvious solution. But when a court issues mandamus to an executive official—commanding compliance with legal obligations—the writ runs horizontally across the branches, rather than vertically within the judiciary. An action seeking this sort of "horizontal" mandamus constitutes an original proceeding, not an appellate one. Following the logic of Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court and courts of appeals lack the power to entertain a mandamus action seeking to enforce executive compliance with a district court's order in such cases. In theory, the contempt power provides a powerful tool for enforcing executive compliance. District courts can impose steep and escalating civil fines on defiant executive agencies and officials. They can even order the arrest and imprisonment of recalcitrant officials. But as the best recent scholarly work demonstrates, contempt has always been a fragile remedy against federal government defendants. In the face of sustained and strategic executive defiance, the doctrinal and practical obstacles may well prove insurmountable. The most fundamental reason for this is that civil contempt sanctions ultimately depend on cooperation from the executive branch. By statute, the United States Marshals Service is subject to "the authority and direction of the Attorney General." A President determined to defy the courts could threaten marshals with termination and direct the Attorney General to choke off the operating capacity of the office in question. Criminal contempt sanctions are another option. But the President's pardon power looms over any criminal contempt proceeding against federal executive officials. For a fuller explanation, you can read my new paper on the appellate void here. Tuesday, October 07, 2025
E-Book of "The Actual Art Of Governing" Available for Pre-Order
Gerard N. Magliocca
My book on Justice Jackson's Youngstown concurrence will be out on Kindle in two weeks. The book tour (live and virtual) starts in November. AAUP v. Rubio and the Big Chill
Guest Blogger
Evelyn Douek Since it was handed down last week, AAUP v. Rubio
has been justifiably celebrated for its strong reaffirmation that the First
Amendment protects the speech of noncitizens just as it does the speech of
citizens. And there has been significant coverage of the rhetoric of Judge
Wiliam Young’s “blistering,”
“stirring,”
“searing”
rebuke of the Trump Administration’s campaign to deport noncitizens for their
political speech, and the ways in which his 161-page opinion grappled with how
to do justice in the Trump Era. Less attention has been paid, however, to a key
jurisprudential move the opinion makes and its importance in this particular moment.
AAUP v. Rubio marks the first case of the Trump Era to explicitly
identify and reject the primary and most pernicious form of speech suppression
employed by this Administration: Chill. What makes the opinion novel is that the First Amendment
rights it vindicates are not those of the non-citizens that the Administration
has attempted to deport for their speech, but instead those similarly situated persons
who are now chilled from expressing themselves freely. Mahmoud
Khalil, Rumeysa
Ozturk, and the many other noncitizens that have been rounded up for their
pro-Palestinian speech were not before the court in AAUP v. Rubio—the
various legal challenges to their deportations remain ongoing. Instead, the case
was brought by organizations representing students and faculty who argued that
the Administration’s practice of publicly targeting and making an example out
of these other non-citizens chilled them in the exercise of their own First
Amendment rights. As Judge Young correctly identified, the damage of this kind
of chilling campaign to public discourse is in fact much more severe than any
individual act of censorship. This is because chill is an especially harmful but efficient
form of speech control, as the Administration well knows. Direct censorship is
laborious, ad hoc, and happens only after the fact. Chill, by contrast, is a
form of prior restraint administered by the speaker themselves out of fear. And
Judge Young found that it was exactly this kind of chill that the
Administration set out to create. The
government never set out to “deport all pro-Palestinian non-citizens,” Judge
Young observed. Instead, it set out to do something “more invidious—to target a
few for speaking out … with the goal of tamping down pro-Palestinian student
protests and terrorizing similarly situated non-citizen (and other)
pro-Palestinians into silence.” Gaming Out the Appellate Void
Andrew Coan
Last spring, I wrote about the possibility that the executive branch might defy a district court order and refuse to appeal. As the prevailing party, the plaintiffs could not appeal. The result would be an appellate void, in which lower federal courts lack effective tools for enforcing their decisions against a recalcitrant executive and higher courts lack any obvious path to intervene. Alternatively, after the Supreme Court's decision in Trump v. CASA, Inc., the executive branch might comply with court orders only as to specific plaintiffs, while continuing to enforce the challenged policies against everyone else. By refusing to appeal, the President would deny higher courts any opportunity to weigh in, without actually defying any binding judicial order. I have now written a full-length article gaming out these scenarios (forthcoming in Cornell Law Review). The article first explains the jurisdictional dynamics that create the appellate void and why contempt sanctions offer little practical remedy. It then analyzes why a President might find this strategy tempting. In effect, the appellate void constitutes a reverse Marbury v. Madison. Instead of the Supreme Court asserting the power of judicial review, while leaving the President powerless to push back, the President would assert the power to defy the federal courts, while leaving the Supreme Court powerless to respond. This result is not inevitable. The appellate void strategy has real costs that might dissuade the President from embracing it, and courts and litigants have many potential responses. But if successful, the strategy would have large implications for judicial review, separation of powers, and the rule of law. The full article is available here. Saturday, October 04, 2025
The Art of Replacing the Law with the Deal
Joseph Fishkin
This week, the Trump Administration attempted to make universities an offer we can’t refuse. With great fanfare, the administration announced that a short list of prestigious universities were being invited to adopt a “compact” with the entire federal government. An extremely credulous mainstream press quickly reported that this was a new tactic: instead of the heavy stick of suspending and terminating federal grants in the guise of enforcing Title VI, the new approach was all carrot, “offering a competitive advantage to those that sign on.” “[T]he biggest difference” with the new approach, NPR opined, “is instead of threats, if you agree to these demands, it would provide a reward.” Friday, October 03, 2025
The Government Shutdown and the Filibuster
David Super
Senate Majority
Leader John Thune evidently plans to keep bringing up the House-passed
continuing resolution daily so that Senate Democrats must repeatedly deny it
the sixty votes it needs to pass.
Meanwhile, House Speaker Mike Johnson has been keeping his chamber out
of session so that Republicans can argue that the only way to end the shutdown
quickly is to pass the House Republicans’ continuing resolution. This is all rather
silly theater. Senate Democrats have
proposed their own continuing resolution, and the government shutdown remains
in place as much because Senate Republicans deny sixty votes to the Democratic
bill as because Senate Democrats deny sixty votes to the Republican bill. If the Senate were to agree on a bill, the
House could be brought back in less than a day.
Indeed, if the Senate passed a continuing resolution with broad
bipartisan support, the House could go back into session almost immediately with
only a handful of Members, vote to suspend the rules, and pass the legislation
with everyone agreeing not to prompt a quorum call. Various informal
bipartisan groups of senators are forming to try to facilitate the search of a
settlement, but with the Republican leadership determined to make Democrats
buckle there is no receptivity at the moment to any mediation. Republicans seem to be shifting from claiming
that Democrats are demanding health insurance for undocumented immigrants – an outright
lie that most reporters recognized as such – to saying that health insurance
premiums should be addressed in December – which is after open enrollment and
after many low- and moderate-income families will have had to make painful
financial choices about whether they can continue to afford health
coverage. We may see several rounds of
this grasping for a winning message before anyone considers modifying their
substantive position. Underlying all
this is the question of why Majority Leader Thune does not eliminate the
filibuster and then pass the continuing resolution with the simple majority
that he possesses. It would seem that he
is the one person who could end the shutdown tomorrow without yielding on any
policy positions. We cannot be sure he
is not doing so, but several explanations seem likely. Wednesday, October 01, 2025
Balkinization Symposium on Dylan C. Penningroth, Before the Movement-- Collected Posts
JB
Here are the collected posts for our Balkinization symposium on Dylan C. Penningroth, Before the Movement: The Hidden History of Black Civil Rights (Liveright, 2023). 1. Jack Balkin, Introduction to the Symposium 2. Carol Rose, Looking for Law in All the Wrong Places: Dylan Penningroth’s Before the Movement 3. Mark Tushnet, Legal Pluralism in “Before the Movement” 4. Steve Griffin, Penningroth’s Achievement 5. Evelyn Atkinson, Black Civil Rights and Black Corporate Rights 6. Ian Ayres, Did Race Distort the rule of Taft v. Hyatt? 7. Mark Graber, The Weapons of the Weak Before the Movement 8. Dylan C. Penningroth, Symposium Response 1: The strange career of civil rights 9. Dylan C. Penningroth, Symposium Response Part 2: Centering and de-centering race Shutdown, You’d Better Take Care
David Super
Appropriations for
much of the federal government just lapsed.
This begins a partial shutdown of the federal government. The general news media is extensively
covering this story’s broad outlines.
This post does not seek to retell that story but rather comments on five
issues that media accounts are missing or confusing. First, the cause
of the shutdown is not as clear as it might be.
Democrats decided weeks ago that they would demand extension of expiring
health insurance premium tax credits as a condition for any continuing
resolution lasting more than a few days.
This makes sense: even though the
credits do not formally expire until the end of the year, open enrollment is
fast approaching. Millions of people may
drop health coverage if the prices they see reflect the absence of the enhanced
credits. The affordability of health
coverage clearly resonates with the electorate, and this issue is already
splitting the Republican caucus. On the other hand,
Democrats have a more fundamental problem:
no “clean” continuing resolution is possible because the Administration
has demonstrated that it will not follow appropriations legislation. Democrats provided crucial votes for a
continuing resolution in March, with the continuation of programs they favored
their main motivation. The
Administration then ignored many of those appropriations while congressional
Republicans moved a partisan rescission of billions of dollars for foreign aid
and public broadcasting. Last Friday, the
first impoundment case to reach the Supreme Court. The Court stayed a district court’s
injunction requiring the Administration to honor the admirably clear
appropriations for a variety of foreign aid programs. The Court did not say that the Administration
was likely to prevail on the merits – as it has in many other cases decided on its
Shadow Docket – and indeed went out of its way to caution against reading its action
as signaling a decision on the merits.
Nonetheless, it granted a stay on a balancing of the equities. Many of the grantees have already folded from
the lack of the withheld funds, and more likely will be gone before the Court
can decide the case on the merits. Thus,
as a practical matter, the Trump Administration is free to ignore
appropriations acts, including a “clean continuing resolution”, for the
foreseeable future. It is hard to see
how Democrats can agree to a continuing resolution for any length of time that
does not contain language firmly barring the (already preposterous) legal
theories the Administration has offered to justify its impoundments. But apparently they will not be emphasizing
the Administration’s blatant disregard of the previous “clean continuing resolution”
for which the Democrats voted. Second, this
shutdown may be harder than most to end precisely because the Administration
has obliterated its ability to make a credible deal. The path to ending past impasses was often
greased with quiet promises to fund this or that project dear to powerful
members of the minority party. But if
the Trump Administration will not honor statutory language, it certainly will
not be bound by quite understandings or the ubiquitous appropriations “report
language”. This Administration also has
shown far less sensitivity to public opinion than its predecessors, including
Trump 1.0. Congressional Republicans
worry about offending swing voters, but they worry much more about offending
the President. Democratic
leaders, in turn, have remarkably little flexibility. Much of their base is furious, having
accepted a not-entirely-justified perception that Democrats are not fighting
hard enough. Fear of being skewered on
Bluesky has profoundly shaped Democratic leaders’ choices, often in ways that
actually undercut the progressive agenda.
After taking the difficult choice to provide the key votes for the
continuing resolution in March, Democratic leaders were humiliated when the
Administration impounded funds for many of the programs they voted to
preserve. These leaders will have
difficulty backing down again even if public opinion turns decisively against
them. And because progressives have
gotten into the habit of believing cherry-picked polling results circulated on
social media, they may not give leadership the room to back down even if the
shutdown is clearly losing the public. Third, the only
reason the Democrats have any say in any of this is because of the
filibuster. Alas, terrible cases of
laryngitis seem to have afflicted the voices that caustically denounced anyone arguing
for preserving
the filibuster
to guard
against disaster. Fourth, Office of
Management and Budget Director Russell Vought’s threats of mass layoffs in the
event of a partial government shutdown is a transparent fake – yet it seems to
be drawing in a great many credulous commentators. A partial government shutdown does not
grant OMB any special powers. In fact,
it actually may temporarily make layoffs even more unlawful. In a lapse of general
appropriations, the Appropriations Clause of the U.S. Constitution and the Anti-Deficiency
Act preclude the federal government from paying employees whose salaries
are not covered by some specific appropriation still in force. The Act also prohibits
government officials from accepting unpaid service not explicitly authorized by
law “except for emergencies involving the safety of human life or the
protection of property”. The Act clarifies
that this emergency exception “does not include ongoing, regular functions of
government the suspension of which would not imminently threaten the safety of
human life or the protection of property.”
In practice, this
means that most federal employees are furloughed and locked out of their
jobs. A few unlucky “essential employees”
are required to report but not paid. This
arrangement has worked through numerous appropriations lapses without any
widespread problems. Therefore, no
layoffs – nothing beyond these temporary furloughs – are needed to honor the
Anti-Deficiency Act. In fact, because
laying off government employees permanently is not an “emergency involving the
safety of human life or the protection of property”, any Administration
official performing this function during an appropriations lapse would
be violating the Act. Violations of the
Anti-Deficiency Act carry criminal penalties,
although we should not hold our breath waiting for Attorney General Bondi to
bring indictments. The layoffs that
Director Vought threatens also violate civil service law in various ways, most
obviously by providing less than the required sixty days’ notice. The Administration has wantonly disregarded
civil service law since January, but public employees’ unions’ suit was rejected
on the grounds that any challenges must begin as grievances before federal personnel
agencies. That will often be impossible,
however, because President Trump unlawfully fired the only Democratic member of
the Merit Systems Protection Board, denying it a quorum
to act on complaints. The Administration
has demonstrated its desire to lay off federal employees en masse since it
took office: this has absolutely nothing
to do with a lapse in appropriations.
The only reason any federal employee is still working is that the
Administration concluded that the risk of political embarrassment from abandoning
that function outweighed the marginal appeal of sacking another civil
servant. Nothing about a
government shutdown changes that calculus.
With or without a government shutdown, the Administration will lay off
anyone it thinks it can get away with dumping; with or without a government
shutdown, the Administration will not lay off anyone whose departure it fears
will blow back on it. Director Vought’s
threats are naked attempts at intimidation that should not affect anyone’s assessment
of a government shutdown, whatever they think about federal workers. Finally, as
someone who spends a fair amount of time talking with reporters about current events,
I have noticed that, as a group, reporters are getting less and less interested
in whether this or that Administration action is legal. Law has limited value as predictor of what this
Administration will do. And with the
Supreme Court so frequently overriding lower courts’ injunctions against the Administration’s
lawlessness in minimally reasoned Shadow Docket orders, even many of the
brightest and most capable reporters seem to feel little need to sort through
statutes and caselaw. I do not share
their skepticism, but persuading them that law matters is getting more and more
difficult. That by itself is a
fundamental change in our constitutional order.
@DavidASuper.bsky.social
@DavidASuper1 Saturday, September 27, 2025
Virginia Is For Vengeance
Gerard N. Magliocca
Presidents sometimes try to wield the criminal law against their political opponents. It never works. Jefferson went after Aaron Burr. That failed. FDR targeted Andrew Mellon. That was a flop. And so on. The Comey indictment (and the others that will surely be brought) will meet the same end. The Mellon example is instructive. He was our most powerful Treasury Secretary not named Hamilton. Mellon was also wealthy. FDR wanted him prosecuted on criminal tax fraud charges. Robert Jackson, newly arrived at the DOJ, objected that a criminal charge was unwise and unwarranted. He was overruled. A federal grand jury in Pittsburgh then refused to indict Mellon, which was a major embarrassment for the Government. A civil tax case ensued that was still going on after Mellon died. Grand juries work best when they are asked to indict well-known members of a local community on flimsy charges. Mellon was famous in Pittsburgh because (you might say) he owned half of town. James Comey, by contrast, is not a local celebrity. He just lives in Virginia. Nevertheless, the grand jury asked to indict Comey rejected one of the Government's three charges. That is unusual. There is some confusion about what else happened, which should come as no surprise given the resignation of the prior interim U.S. Attorney. Comey's defense attorneys must be licking their chops. Thursday, September 25, 2025
Symposium Response Part 2: Centering and de-centering race
Guest Blogger
For the Balkinization symposium on Dylan C. Penningroth, Before the Movement: The Hidden History of Black Civil Rights (Liveright, 2023). Dylan C. Penningroth
Looking at the Symposium overall, I think these posts have
drawn out what I hope is a creative tension in the book’s approach to race. On
the one hand, the book invites law scholars to move race and race relations toward
the center of the curriculum and the profession. But then it asks historians,
and especially African American historians, in essence to de-center race
relations. There were both conceptual and pragmatic reasons behind this dual
approach. Conceptually, I felt that the history of race had too often been
conflated with the history of Black people, and that this conflation inadvertently
wound up treating African Americans instrumentally—as something more like a
window into the soul of America than as people worth studying in themselves. From
a purely pragmatic point of view, using local court records practically
compelled me to think hard about centering race: the overwhelming majority of
the cases involving Black people were between Black people. Obviously, white
supremacy produced these skewed proportions, and yet it seemed important to
take seriously what Black-Black cases had to say, especially when I saw other
kinds of sources saying similar things. It is by now axiomatic that Black
people fought for “independence in their working lives,” autonomy for “their
families and communities,” and “equal citizenship” in the body politic.[1] But what did autonomy mean
to a Black tenant farmer like Nate Shaw (Ned Cobb) who said that his own father
treated him “just like slavery”? What did equal citizenship mean to Black women
who were treated as second-class citizens in their churches and fraternal
orders, the citizenship that mattered most (or at least most immediately) to Black
people before the movement? Wednesday, September 24, 2025
Symposium Response Part 1: The strange career of civil rights
Guest Blogger
For the Balkinization symposium on Dylan C. Penningroth, Before the Movement: The Hidden History of Black Civil Rights (Liveright, 2023). Dylan C. Penningroth Many thanks to Jack Balkin and Balkinization for
hosting this symposium. I’m grateful to Carol Rose, Evelyn Atkinson, Ian Ayres,
Mark Graber, Mark Tushnet, and Steve Griffin for taking the time to read and
provide such probing comments on Before the Movement. It has taken me
awhile to post my response, in part because it has been so much fun to absorb
and learn from their comments. The contributors
beautifully bring out several of the book’s main themes, and space allows me to
touch on only some of their constructive critiques. The first, as Professor
Griffin notes, is how Black people used and thought about law from the 1830s to
the 1970s, how a subset of nineteenth-century rights and privileges came to be
understood as “civil rights,” and how that term, over the next century or so,
slowly came to stand for the principles of nondiscrimination and
anti-humiliation that animate much of modern civil rights law. If had been more
daring and witty, I might have titled the book “The Strange Career of Civil
Rights.”[1] The second theme is the sources I used to tell this
story. Of course, I am far from the first historian to go asking big questions of
small courts. Since the early 2000s, a number of legal historians have made the
trek to the courthouse door, including Laura Edwards, Melvin Ely, Sarah
Barringer Gordon, Martha Jones, Anne Twitty, Kimberly Welch and, more recently,
Sarah L. H. Gronningsater.
Aside from the physical and logistical challenges of researching in
under-funded facilities that are not really “archives,”[2] all of us have confronted
the analytic and conceptual challenges of taking the legalities latent in local
court records and relating them to the “mandarin materials,” as Robert Gordon
termed them, of appellate case law, statutes, and treatises.[3] But increasingly, on days
when I walked past the inevitable Confederate statue to beg another circuit
clerk’s permission to rummage around in the courthouse attic, I felt the
presence of a different intellectual tradition than perhaps the ones we had
been trained in; that we were actually following
in the footsteps of earlier generations of Black historians, who had to negotiate
with the gatekeepers of official records in the unfathomably harsher
environment of the 1930s and 40s. Only a few of those earlier historians were
professional scholars, like Luther Porter Jackson. Mostly they were lay
historians—church officers, like A.M.E. Bishop Richard R. Wright,[4] or
lawyer-memoirists, like Thomas Calhoun Walker,[5] or
keepers of family history, like my great-great-uncle Thomas Holcomb. What they wanted
to demonstrate was that, right in the maw of a nation dedicated to white
supremacy, “free Negroes” and their descendants had “made a record” of
achievement in education, landownership, and trade.[6] And they
believed that record entitled them to “the good will and respect of [their]
neighbors and fellow citizens,”[7] as
Jackson put it—or what activists called “public rights”[8] or “first-class
citizenship.”[9]
These earlier Black historians’ linking of common-law rights to “classes” of
citizenship eventually helped inform my argument about how the idea of civil
rights changed. Often stuffed with thumbnail sketches and hopeful statistics
about Black churches and property ownership and literacy, these works were more
than mere “encyclopedic pep talks” or “storehouses of uplift ideology” in the
mold of Booker T. Washington.[10] Whatever
else they were, they also hinted at a history of Black legal thought, one that
seemed to me to be in dialogue with questions of racial justice but not
contained by them. More immediately, those early Black historians seemed to
suggest that there were certain continuities across the gulf of the Civil War: that
white people more or less took it for granted that Black people could own and
trade things.[11] That, at least in the
realm of civil rights, the transformation came gradually, raggedly, and perhaps
rife with irony. We might explain this continuity in terms of ideology—specifically,
white people’s investment in the belief that law was not (just) an instrument
of class power. More frequently, as Professor Graber points out, I look to Derrick
Bell’s interest-convergence theory. This was a “triumph of informal property
over formal law,” Professor Rose writes, where wide swaths of white southerners—including
huge numbers of non-slaveowning whites—enjoyed easy access to cheap, convenient
goods and services from enslaved Black people, an enjoyment procured not (just)
through “brute compulsion” but through legal marginality and indeterminacy.[12] White southerners benefited
precisely from the law’s refusal to speak clearly and consistently about slaves’
property and contracts. (To which I would add that there are uncomfortable
resonances with the benefits American citizens enjoy from the work of
undocumented immigrants today.) Tuesday, September 23, 2025
Balkinization Symposium on Serena Mayeri, Marital Privilege-- Collected Posts
JB
Here are the collected posts for our Balkinization symposium on Serena Mayeri, Marital Privilege: Marriage, Inequality, and the Transformation of American Law (Yale University Press, 2025). 1. Jack Balkin, Introduction to the Symposium 2. Kimberly Mutcherson, The Staying Power of Marriage Inequality 3. Julie C. Suk, Promoting Equality and Marriage 4. Clare Huntington, Understanding the Roots of Today’s Marital Inequality 5. William N. Eskridge Jr., Marital Supremacy, Liberalization & Privilege 6. Douglas NeJaime, From Status to Function 7. Kristin Collins, Marital Privilege and Immigration Law 8. Serena Mayeri, Response to Commentators Oral Argument as Eulogy
Gerard N. Magliocca
In Gideon v. Wainwright, Justice Harlan concurred that Betts v. Brady should be overruled but complained that Betts "is entitled to a more respectful burial." The same could be said for Humphrey's Executor, either on the interim docket or when Trump v. Slaughter is decided. That said, I'm not sure whether to envy the attorney who will argue Slaughter. That person will surely lose. But going in knowing that you will lose may provide the freedom to say whatever you want.
Monday, September 22, 2025
Response to Commentators
Guest Blogger
For the Balkinization symposium on Serena Mayeri, Marital Privilege: Marriage, Inequality, and the Transformation of American Law (Yale University Press, 2025). Serena Mayeri I am immensely grateful to each
of the symposium participants for taking time to engage so thoughtfully with
this book, and for the countless ways their intellectual influence and personal
generosity enriched the project over the dozen-plus years of its gestation. I
can’t possibly do justice here to each set of comments, much less the authors’
own scholarly oeuvres and impact, so offer just a few reflections on some of
the themes their posts raise. Jawboning Late Night: A Lesson in How Corporate Consolidation Creates Free Speech Problems
Guest Blogger
Daniel Browning ABC Pulls Kimmel Off the Air On Wednesday, September 17th, ABC
announced its decision to pull “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” off the air
indefinitely following Kimmel’s monologue about Charlie Kirk’s assassination. Disney’s decision came shortly after FCC chairman Brendan
Carr made the following thinly veiled threats against ABC. Carr also called
on licensed broadcasters to “push back on” networks and “preempt” content
that does not serve local communities. Sure enough, Nexstar, which owns many
ABC affiliate stations, announced
that it would “preempt ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ for the foreseeable future.” ABC
suspended Kimmel shortly thereafter. Jawboning and the First Amendment As other commentators have observed,
Kimmel’s suspension appears to be a paradigm case of “jawboning”—where
the government indirectly censors expression by pressuring some private
intermediary to censor the expression directly. Just last year, in N.R.A. v.
Vullo, the Court
reaffirmed that government jawboning can violate the First Amendment
whenever it coerces a private intermediary to censor speech. In Vullo,
a state official offered not to prosecute an insurance underwriter, Lloyd’s,
for regulatory infractions in exchange for Lloyd’s’ agreement to sever ties with
the N.R.A. The Court held that, by offering the inducement in order to punish the
N.R.A.’s speech, Vullo had engaged in unconstitutional coercion. After Vullo, the constitutionality of government
exhortations for private intermediaries to interfere with a third-party’s
speech turns on whether the government’s communication is persuasive
(constitutional) or coercive (unconstitutional). Why the Kimmel Case Raises Important First Amendment
Issues Other
commentators have called for Kimmel to bring a First Amendment challenge
against the government, on the theory that FCC Chair Carr’s threats against
broadcasters were unconstitutionally coercive. In some ways, this does seem to be an easy case. Carr makes
vague comments that appear to threaten networks and broadcasters, and ABC
suspended Kimmel shortly thereafter. Thus, Kimmel might have an easier
time establishing standing than did the various plaintiffs in Murthy v.
Missouri. The Court in Murthy held
that the various plaintiffs lacked standing, in large part, because they could
not show that government pressure caused their injuries. The social
media platforms, Justice Barrett reasoned, “had independent incentives to
moderate content.” In other ways, though, the Kimmel case raises to the fore
important complexities that the Court has not adequately addressed in its
jawboning jurisprudence. Doctrinally, the coercion/persuasion rule, as developed in Bantam
Books and Vullo provides very little guidance to courts in
adjudicating jawboning claims. Conceptually, there is a huge gap between
government communications that could rightly be labeled “persuasive” and
communications that could be called “coercive.” Consider an example that arose in the Murthy litigation—President
Biden’s comment that social media platforms were “killing
people” by allowing users to spread misinformation. Persuasion or coercion?
I, for one, couldn’t say. The problem here is that there are myriad forms of
government pressure that are neither persuasive nor coercive—but are rather
somewhere in between. While Vullo settles the question in clear cases where
government pressure can be easily identified as coercion or persuasion, it
leaves courts without clear guidance in cases, perhaps like the one here, where
government pressure occupies the space between coercion and persuasion. The much larger, more systemic problem, however, is that the
modern corporate law infrastructure makes jawboning both much more effective
and much more difficult to challenge in court. Because traditional media is increasingly
owned by a small handful of firms, government jawboning is increasingly
likely to prove effective, for two reasons. First, the government can hold out a regulatory carrot (as
relevant in the Kimmel case, approval
of an acquisition) in exchange for “voluntarily” censoring expression. For
corporate executives, the cost of censorship will be much cheaper than the cost
of drawing the government’s ire, especially as the arms race to add
subsidiaries creates more nodes at which the government can leverage its regulatory
authority. Second, the consolidation of smaller firms into large
mega-firms (like Disney) decreases the cost to the government of targeting
disfavored expression. The government only needs to pressure a small handful of
firms rather than many. The corporate landscape that makes jawboning more effective
also makes it more challenging for speakers to bring successful First Amendment
jawboning claims. It can often make good business sense for highly
consolidated and diversified firms to censor speech even irrespective of
government pressure. For example, before deciding to suspend Kimmel, Disney CEO
Robert Iger reportedly
was hearing from advertisers who feared a conservative firestorm and from
Disney employees who reported receiving threats. And because Disney owns an
array of subsidiaries, Disney executives had to worry about a Kimmel-related
boycott of their theme parks, cruises, merchandise, and other programming. These
non-governmental pressures very well could’ve given Disney executives “independent
incentives” to suspend Kimmel. So What Can be Done? Doctrinally, the
Court in jawboning cases should focus more on whether the government
harbored an unconstitutional
motive—whether the government intended to censor unfavorable
expression—than on whether the government’s communication could be labeled
coercive or persuasive. In the alternative, the Court should provide further
guidance on how to determine whether the government’s communication with the
private intermediary rises to the level of unconstitutional coercion. More systemically, we should begin to think about corporate
consolidation and oligopoly as a free speech problem. As firms become more
consolidated and diversified, traditional media, which is crucial for public discourse,
becomes more vulnerable to indirect government censorship. A more durable solution than relying on courts to police
government jawboning would involve, first, consumers increasing the costs to
firms of capitulating to the government. This bottom-up solution, which would
require citizen-consumers to mobilize to protect free speech values, has
already proven somewhat
effective in the boycott of Target over ending its DEI policies. Indeed,
there is some
evidence that consumers have already begun to penalize Disney for their
capitulation. Second, taking a more top-down approach, a future Democratic
administration should charge the FCC and FTC with considering the free speech
implications of corporate consolidation and diversification. Daniel Browning is a JD Candidate at Yale Law School and a PhD Candidate at Princeton University. You can reach him by e-mail at Daniel.browning@yale.edu. Tuesday, September 16, 2025
Marital Privilege and Immigration Law
Guest Blogger
For the Balkinization symposium on Serena Mayeri, Marital Privilege: Marriage, Inequality, and the Transformation of American Law (Yale University Press, 2025). Kristin
Collins Serena
Mayeri’s excellent new book Marital Privilege charts the transformation
of marriage as a central fixture in American law and social policy from the
1960s to 2003. Starting in the 1960s, various groups and individuals challenged
marriage’s hold on Americans’ options for family formation, their sex lives, and
their access to state created entitlements and benefits. These challenges were not
part of an organized political or legal movement, as one often finds in stories
of legal transformation, but they were numerous and sustained. Liberal
feminists challenged the sex-asymmetrical rights and duties that marriage
entailed. Black feminists were focused on securing greater autonomy in deciding
whether and when to have children – in or out of marriage – and sought supportive
communities rather than government surveillance. Mothers and fathers argued that
the status designation of illegitimacy harmed children, in part by creating a
legal presumption that their fathers had no interest in their wellbeing.
Individuals who sought to form non-traditional families challenged family-based
zoning laws and housing regulations that were premised on the marital family
norm. Lesbian and gay couples struggled for legal recognition and rights in
just about every domain of life. Perhaps most famously, individuals who sought
to marry across the color line challenged restrictions on interracial marriage.
With
these challenges to the regulation of marriage and its legal primacy in view, Mayeri
identifies a puzzle: For a good 40 years, as marriage’s place in American law
and social policy was contested from multiple directions, and as marriage rates
declined, marriage nevertheless remained (and remains) a privileged status in
American law. How to explain this outcome? Mayeri argues that even as challenges
to marriage’s primacy succeeded in eliminating its more pronounced
discriminatory features, those challenges also helped to sustain the privileged
legal status of marriage. Moreover, she concludes, as “marriage declined among
less affluent Americans, marital status law intensified racial and economic
inequality.” Mayeri
offers abundant evidence to support her thesis, but she is also quick to
acknowledge that the historical sources she has amassed tell a complicated
story. Not only were the sundry challenges to marital status law uncoordinated,
many of the key players in her book disagreed about the role that marriage
should play in social policy and how its contours should be determined and
policed. Here, I will add to the complexity of this story by focusing on a
specific field of regulation: immigration.
|
Books by Balkinization Bloggers ![]() Linda C. McClain and Aziza Ahmed, The Routledge Companion to Gender and COVID-19 (Routledge, 2024) ![]() David Pozen, The Constitution of the War on Drugs (Oxford University Press, 2024) ![]() Jack M. Balkin, Memory and Authority: The Uses of History in Constitutional Interpretation (Yale University Press, 2024) ![]() Mark A. Graber, Punish Treason, Reward Loyalty: The Forgotten Goals of Constitutional Reform after the Civil War (University of Kansas Press, 2023) ![]() Jack M. Balkin, What Roe v. Wade Should Have Said: The Nation's Top Legal Experts Rewrite America's Most Controversial Decision - Revised Edition (NYU Press, 2023) ![]() Andrew Koppelman, Burning Down the House: How Libertarian Philosophy Was Corrupted by Delusion and Greed (St. Martin’s Press, 2022) ![]() Gerard N. Magliocca, Washington's Heir: The Life of Justice Bushrod Washington (Oxford University Press, 2022) ![]() Joseph Fishkin and William E. Forbath, The Anti-Oligarchy Constitution: Reconstructing the Economic Foundations of American Democracy (Harvard University Press, 2022) Mark Tushnet and Bojan Bugaric, Power to the People: Constitutionalism in the Age of Populism (Oxford University Press 2021). ![]() Mark Philip Bradley and Mary L. Dudziak, eds., Making the Forever War: Marilyn B. Young on the Culture and Politics of American Militarism Culture and Politics in the Cold War and Beyond (University of Massachusetts Press, 2021). ![]() Jack M. Balkin, What Obergefell v. Hodges Should Have Said: The Nation's Top Legal Experts Rewrite America's Same-Sex Marriage Decision (Yale University Press, 2020) ![]() Frank Pasquale, New Laws of Robotics: Defending Human Expertise in the Age of AI (Belknap Press, 2020) ![]() Jack M. Balkin, The Cycles of Constitutional Time (Oxford University Press, 2020) ![]() Mark Tushnet, Taking Back the Constitution: Activist Judges and the Next Age of American Law (Yale University Press 2020). ![]() Andrew Koppelman, Gay Rights vs. Religious Liberty?: The Unnecessary Conflict (Oxford University Press, 2020) ![]() Ezekiel J Emanuel and Abbe R. Gluck, The Trillion Dollar Revolution: How the Affordable Care Act Transformed Politics, Law, and Health Care in America (PublicAffairs, 2020) ![]() Linda C. McClain, Who's the Bigot?: Learning from Conflicts over Marriage and Civil Rights Law (Oxford University Press, 2020) ![]() Sanford Levinson and Jack M. Balkin, Democracy and Dysfunction (University of Chicago Press, 2019) ![]() Sanford Levinson, Written in Stone: Public Monuments in Changing Societies (Duke University Press 2018) ![]() Mark A. Graber, Sanford Levinson, and Mark Tushnet, eds., Constitutional Democracy in Crisis? (Oxford University Press 2018) ![]() Gerard Magliocca, The Heart of the Constitution: How the Bill of Rights became the Bill of Rights (Oxford University Press, 2018) ![]() Cynthia Levinson and Sanford Levinson, Fault Lines in the Constitution: The Framers, Their Fights, and the Flaws that Affect Us Today (Peachtree Publishers, 2017) ![]() Brian Z. Tamanaha, A Realistic Theory of Law (Cambridge University Press 2017) ![]() Sanford Levinson, Nullification and Secession in Modern Constitutional Thought (University Press of Kansas 2016) ![]() Sanford Levinson, An Argument Open to All: Reading The Federalist in the 21st Century (Yale University Press 2015) ![]() Stephen M. Griffin, Broken Trust: Dysfunctional Government and Constitutional Reform (University Press of Kansas, 2015) ![]() Frank Pasquale, The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms That Control Money and Information (Harvard University Press, 2015) ![]() Bruce Ackerman, We the People, Volume 3: The Civil Rights Revolution (Harvard University Press, 2014) Balkinization Symposium on We the People, Volume 3: The Civil Rights Revolution ![]() Joseph Fishkin, Bottlenecks: A New Theory of Equal Opportunity (Oxford University Press, 2014) ![]() Mark A. Graber, A New Introduction to American Constitutionalism (Oxford University Press, 2013) ![]() John Mikhail, Elements of Moral Cognition: Rawls' Linguistic Analogy and the Cognitive Science of Moral and Legal Judgment (Cambridge University Press, 2013) ![]() Gerard N. Magliocca, American Founding Son: John Bingham and the Invention of the Fourteenth Amendment (New York University Press, 2013) ![]() Stephen M. Griffin, Long Wars and the Constitution (Harvard University Press, 2013) Andrew Koppelman, The Tough Luck Constitution and the Assault on Health Care Reform (Oxford University Press, 2013) ![]() James E. Fleming and Linda C. McClain, Ordered Liberty: Rights, Responsibilities, and Virtues (Harvard University Press, 2013) Balkinization Symposium on Ordered Liberty: Rights, Responsibilities, and Virtues ![]() Andrew Koppelman, Defending American Religious Neutrality (Harvard University Press, 2013) ![]() Brian Z. Tamanaha, Failing Law Schools (University of Chicago Press, 2012) ![]() Sanford Levinson, Framed: America's 51 Constitutions and the Crisis of Governance (Oxford University Press, 2012) ![]() Linda C. McClain and Joanna L. Grossman, Gender Equality: Dimensions of Women's Equal Citizenship (Cambridge University Press, 2012) ![]() Mary Dudziak, War Time: An Idea, Its History, Its Consequences (Oxford University Press, 2012) ![]() Jack M. Balkin, Living Originalism (Harvard University Press, 2011) ![]() Jason Mazzone, Copyfraud and Other Abuses of Intellectual Property Law (Stanford University Press, 2011) ![]() Richard W. Garnett and Andrew Koppelman, First Amendment Stories, (Foundation Press 2011) ![]() Jack M. Balkin, Constitutional Redemption: Political Faith in an Unjust World (Harvard University Press, 2011) ![]() Gerard Magliocca, The Tragedy of William Jennings Bryan: Constitutional Law and the Politics of Backlash (Yale University Press, 2011) ![]() Bernard Harcourt, The Illusion of Free Markets: Punishment and the Myth of Natural Order (Harvard University Press, 2010) ![]() Bruce Ackerman, The Decline and Fall of the American Republic (Harvard University Press, 2010) Balkinization Symposium on The Decline and Fall of the American Republic ![]() Ian Ayres. Carrots and Sticks: Unlock the Power of Incentives to Get Things Done (Bantam Books, 2010) ![]() Mark Tushnet, Why the Constitution Matters (Yale University Press 2010) Ian Ayres and Barry Nalebuff: Lifecycle Investing: A New, Safe, and Audacious Way to Improve the Performance of Your Retirement Portfolio (Basic Books, 2010) ![]() Jack M. Balkin, The Laws of Change: I Ching and the Philosophy of Life (2d Edition, Sybil Creek Press 2009) ![]() Brian Z. Tamanaha, Beyond the Formalist-Realist Divide: The Role of Politics in Judging (Princeton University Press 2009) ![]() Andrew Koppelman and Tobias Barrington Wolff, A Right to Discriminate?: How the Case of Boy Scouts of America v. James Dale Warped the Law of Free Association (Yale University Press 2009) ![]() Jack M. Balkin and Reva B. Siegel, The Constitution in 2020 (Oxford University Press 2009) Heather K. Gerken, The Democracy Index: Why Our Election System Is Failing and How to Fix It (Princeton University Press 2009) ![]() Mary Dudziak, Exporting American Dreams: Thurgood Marshall's African Journey (Oxford University Press 2008) ![]() David Luban, Legal Ethics and Human Dignity (Cambridge Univ. Press 2007) ![]() Ian Ayres, Super Crunchers: Why Thinking-By-Numbers is the New Way to be Smart (Bantam 2007) ![]() Jack M. Balkin, James Grimmelmann, Eddan Katz, Nimrod Kozlovski, Shlomit Wagman and Tal Zarsky, eds., Cybercrime: Digital Cops in a Networked Environment (N.Y.U. Press 2007) ![]() Jack M. Balkin and Beth Simone Noveck, The State of Play: Law, Games, and Virtual Worlds (N.Y.U. Press 2006) ![]() Andrew Koppelman, Same Sex, Different States: When Same-Sex Marriages Cross State Lines (Yale University Press 2006) Brian Tamanaha, Law as a Means to an End (Cambridge University Press 2006) Sanford Levinson, Our Undemocratic Constitution (Oxford University Press 2006) Mark Graber, Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil (Cambridge University Press 2006) Jack M. Balkin, ed., What Roe v. Wade Should Have Said (N.Y.U. Press 2005) Sanford Levinson, ed., Torture: A Collection (Oxford University Press 2004) Balkin.com homepage Bibliography Conlaw.net Cultural Software Writings Opeds The Information Society Project BrownvBoard.com Useful Links Syllabi and Exams |