the attitude with arnie arnesen the friday edition March 20

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Arnie Arnesen

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Mar 19, 2026, 6:05:19 PM (14 days ago) Mar 19
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the attitude with arnie arnesen
opening thoughts:  The Supreme Court Just Heeded One of Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Sharpest Dissents
producers: Dave Scott and Stephanie Collins
Chloé LaCasse (the best of the attitude)
streaming live at wnhnfm.org noon EST on the dial-94.7FM Concord NH
podcasts available at
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opening thoughts  

The Supreme Court Just Heeded One of Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Sharpest Dissents  https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2026/03/supreme-court-ketanji-brown-jackson-dissent.html

On Monday, the Supreme Court did something surprising: With no noted dissents, the justices refused to let the Trump administration immediately revoke Temporary Protected Status for more than 350,000 immigrants from Haiti and Syria. Instead, the court allowed these immigrants to continue living and working in the United States legally while it reviews the government’s arguments that it can strip them of protections overnight. The justices, in other words, will decide this case the proper way—with full briefing, oral arguments, deliberation, and an opinion—rather than over the shadow docket, with little or no explanation. And hundreds of thousands of law-abiding noncitizens will remain protected from deportation in the meantime.

No one is more vindicated by this unusual exercise of judicial restraint than Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. For 10 months, Jackson has been fighting her colleagues’ callous treatment of immigrants whose legal status was abruptly terminated by the Trump administration. At times, she has been the lone justice willing to speak out. In one extraordinary dissent, she alone castigated the conservative supermajority for its “grave misuse” of the shadow docket to privilege the “bald assertion of unconstrained executive power over countless families’ pleas for the stability our government has promised them.” These condemnations may well have shamed the court into doing exactly what Jackson urged: resolve this dispute through the ordinary process—while maintaining the status quo for immigrants—rather than issuing another snap judgment for the administration that upends hundreds of thousands of lives.

President Donald Trump’s attack on TPS is one of the most far-reaching nativist policies of his second term. The program, which Congress created in 1990, allows immigrants already living in the U.S. to remain and work here legally when dangerous conditions in their country, like armed conflict and natural disasters, make it unsafe to return. When Trump returned to office, the Department of Homeland Security had designated 17 countries for TPS, covering about 1.3 million immigrants. These designations can last for up to 18 months, and may then be renewed or “terminated.” Upon her confirmation, then–Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem sought to end TPS for many countries. But some of the previous administration’s designations were not set to expire for months, with some running into 2026. So Noem claimed the power to “vacate” TPS for these countries—that is, to instantly repeal protections without notice.

The chief problem for Noem, as Georgetown Law professor Steve Vladeck has explained, is that federal law does not say that DHS can “vacate” an existing TPS designation. (That may be why no previous secretary had ever tried to do it.) And if such a move is allowed, the law would require reasoned decisionmaking, including a non-pretextual explanation for the action. Noem did not provide any of this. So lower courts began blocking her “vacatur” of TPS for several countries, among them Venezuela, Haiti, and Syria. (Some also cited the president’s racist comments as proof of unconstitutional animus.) The Trump administration objected, insisting that the power to “terminate” TPS encompassed the authority to end it prematurely. And it argued that federal law bars judicial review of any TPS “termination,” so courts may not even decide whether Noem’s actions complied with the law.

Although lower courts roundly rejected these claims, the Supreme Court appeared to buy them. Last May, over the shadow docket, the justices froze a district court order that had barred Noem from “vacating” the 2023 TPS designation for Venezuela. They did not explain their decision, which revoked legal status for 350,000 immigrants in one stroke. Only Jackson noted her dissent; Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan did not join her.

At the time, Jackson did not explain her vote. But 11 days later, the court issued another unexplained shadow docket decision allowing Noem to end a similar program that covered Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela. This time, Jackson wrote a blistering dissent—joined by Sotomayor—that seemed to explain her earlier vote, as well. She focused on a factor that should be critical when the government seeks emergency relief: Which party would face “irreparable harm” if the Supreme Court failed to act immediately? Here, Jackson explained, the government failed to identify a single “concrete or irreparable injury” that it would suffer by allowing immigrants to remain until the court had the opportunity to hear the case in full and issue its ruling. The immigrants, by contrast, would face “devastation” and “chaos” by losing lawful status. Her argument applied equally to TPS: Rather than allow immigrants’ lives to “unravel all around us,” the Supreme Court should keep these protections in place while the Trump administration defends its prerogative to end them.

Jackson expanded on this message in October when the Supreme Court, over the shadow docket, halted another lower court order preserving TPS for Venezuela. This time around, Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson all dissented. But Sotomayor and Kagan declined to join Jackson’s opinion excoriating the conservative justices for hasty intervention. Once again, the justice criticized the majority for disregarding the harms that would now befall immigrants, including “job loss, family separation, and deportation.” But she also assailed her colleagues for failing to explain themselves. The lower courts, Jackson wrote, justified their decisions against the Trump administration in “reasoned and thoughtful written opinions.” Now SCOTUS chose to “wordlessly override” their “considered judgments,” disregarding its “opinion-writing capacity” in a rush “to allow this administration to disrupt as many lives as possible, as quickly as possible.”

....Does this mean the Supreme Court will ultimately side against the Trump administration? Absolutely not. It is still more likely that the conservative supermajority will concoct a reason to rubber-stamp Noem’s unprecedented “vacatur” of TPS. There are, however, still tangible benefits to this deliberative approach. It means that hundreds of thousands of immigrants will benefit from TPS for at least several more months. It gives them notice that they may need to seek another path to lawful status, like asylum—notice that the administration sought to deny them. It requires the court to hold oral arguments, deliberate, and issue an opinion that will draw public attention to this issue months before the midterms.

These may sound like small wins, but they are wins nonetheless. And they may well be a result of Jackson’s relentless (and frequently solo) denunciation of her colleagues’ corner-cutting complicity with the Trump administration’s nativist agenda. Jackson is widely seen as less tactical than Sotomayor and Kagan, more willing to call out the conservatives’ mischief at the cost of collegiality. But Monday’s surprise suggests that sometimes blunt truths are worth more than pulled punches."

part one: Harvey Kronberg if it is Friday it must be Texas...Harvey is the publisher of the Quorum Report Texas oldest political newsletter
topics:
With no Trump endorsement, Cornyn, Paxton let deadline to remove names from ballot pass. https://www.houstonchronicle.com/politics/texas/article/texas-senate-runoff-trump-endorsement-22081664.php

136 measles cases reported in Texas so far this year, most of them in federal detention centers The state health department reports that 99 of the cases originated in a contracted detention facility in Hudspeth County.

Texas cities, state government cancel Cesar Chavez Day in wake of report on activist The New York Times on Wednesday published allegations that the labor rights leader had sexually abused women and girls. https://www.texastribune.org/2026/03/18/cesar-chavez-day-texas-fallout-sexual-abuse-allegations/

Lina Hidalgo’s Last Rodeo The Harris County judge spent the past week feuding with Houston’s most popular institution. It didn’t go well. https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-politics/lina-hidalgo-houston-rodeo-feud/

A Battle Over Texas Beaches Could Ground Elon Musk’s Rockets The Texas Supreme Court is weighing arguments that threaten to upend the operations at SpaceX's Starbase. https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-politics/spacex-boca-chica-beach-lawsuit-supreme-court/

part two:
Bill Curry  was a Connecticut state senator, comptroller and two time Democratic nominee for governor who served as Counselor to the President in the Clinton White House. He has written for Salon, the Daily Beast, the Huffington Post and the Hartford Courant and has provided commentary on National Public Radio, MSNBC and many other news outlets. 
Harold Meyerson is editor at large of The American Prospect.
topics: 

Donald Trump Has Lit a Global Match

Trump and his aides think the United States has global leverage that his predecessors refused to use. He seems to forget that other countries have leverage, too—and they’re intent on using it to stop him. https://newrepublic.com/article/207218/donald-trump-global-leverage-foreign-policy

The cost of vegetables jumped 49% last month as inflation hit hard and companies raised prices.
nh
Fed Reserve Chair Says Trump’s Policies Mostly to Blame for Inflation https://newrepublic.com/post/207951/federal-reserve-chair-powell-trump-policies-inflation

JD Vance Admits Gas Prices Are About to Get Ugly: “Rough Road Ahead” The Trump administration doesn’t know how to respond to skyrocketing gas prices thanks to the Iran war. https://newrepublic.com/post/207947/jd-vance-gas-prices-rough-road-ahead-iran-war

There Will Be No Post-Presidential Peace For Donald Trump The president and his allies will face impeachments, lawsuits, and maybe even The Hague. https://newrepublic.com/article/207369/trump-post-presidency-accountability-hague

Trump Has Brought American Paramilitary Violence HomeThe United States has a long history of paramilitary violence abroad. Now, ICE and CBP agents are using the same tactics against American citizens. https://newrepublic.com/article/207274/trump-brought-american-paramilitary-violence-home

Competition for Jeff Bezos’s Shabby Washington Post
Robert Allbritton, who founded and then sold Politico, is launching a kind of rival to the Post.  https://prospect.org/2026/03/19/jeff-bezos-washington-post-allbritton-politico-newspaper/
Israel’s Manipulation of Trump on IranToday on TAP: The worse the Iran war goes, the more blame is likely to be directed at Israel, and by association the Jews. https://prospect.org/2026/03/18/iran-israel-joe-kent-trump-netanyahu-antisemitism/


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KEEPING THE POT STIRRED SO SCUM DOESN'T RISE TO THE TOP -  Anonymous 

D. ARNIE ARNESEN
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