Oral Argument Takeaways | Roberts Hammers Second-Class Rights, Court Credits Pension Protections, Justices Float Process Fix
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About this listen
Overview
The High Court Report covers three major oral arguments from this past week, analyzing constitutional clashes over Second Amendment rights, pension plan calculations, and presidential removal powers. Each case presents fundamental questions about constitutional interpretation, federal authority, and the balance between individual rights and government power.
Takeaways:
Wolford v. Lopez
• Second Amendment treated as second-class right compared to First Amendment protections
• Historical evidence battle focuses on colonial anti-poaching laws and Black Codes versus modern concealed carry contexts
• Justices skeptical that 1771 hunting regulations justify modern permission slip requirements for constitutional rights
M&K Employee Solutions v. IAM
• Pension liability calculation dispute centers on timing of actuarial assumptions versus measurement dates
• Built-in statutory safeguards include professional ethics requirements and mandatory arbitration processes
• Court likely to rule that "as of" creates reference point rather than deadline for calculations
Trump v. Cook
• Presidential removal authority clashes with Federal Reserve independence principles
• "For cause" standard requires judicial review to prevent arbitrary executive actions
• Procedural defects provide potential narrow ruling path without resolving broader constitutional questions
Attribution Episode analysis draws from Daniel Thompson's Substack piece "Litigating Originalism in Bruen: A Brief-Level Coding Study of History, Evidence, and Argument Form" available at https://legalytics.substack.com/p/litigating-originalism-in-bruen-a