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Re: EternalPatience post# 677839

Wednesday, 05/12/2021 1:28:29 PM

Wednesday, May 12, 2021 1:28:29 PM

Post# of 794629
No, the SCOTUS is meeting for their 1st conference in May tomorrow, they haven't had to prepare for oral arguments since the 1st Tuesday of May. That means they have had time to do their most important job, writing opinions. I'm sure that they are thinking, with 33 decisions to write between the end of oral arguments and the 4th of July, that they naturally want to begin their Summer Vacation. They have likely been fairly busy writing opinions since their last conference meeting in April.

They will then decide at tomorrows conference meeting which opinions are ready for release, what's still in the pipeline, and how it is going on all the undecided cases.

For the one or more opinions ready for release they will announce our favorite time lately, the opinion release date, usually it will be the following Thursday, but they are the Supremes so Friday, Monday, whatever they want to do.

Remember, that the Collins and ACA cases are similar in that they both deal with the courts approach to "Severability Analysis" (which is kinda the courts way of REWRITING LARGE LEGISLATIVE ACTS, even though it is largely understood that writing the laws are for the Legislative Branch of government) and therefore Collins will have to mesh with the legal reasoning in California v Texas (the ACA Case), SO I THINK WE MAY BE WAITING FOR A WHILE, as they do the low hanging fruit cases first that they generally mostly agree with.

On the other hand, it COULD be as early as Friday, but I'm pretty sure not tomorrow, but who really knows except the SCOTUS?

https://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/terms/ot2020/