Did Missouri’s governor just moot Trinity Luteran v. Pauley?

Days before the Supreme Court is set to hear Trinity Lutheran v. Pauley, Missouri Governor Eric Greitens instructed the Department of Natural Resources (“DNR”) to allow religious organizations to apply, and receive grants. Because of this new order, Trinity Lutheran may be mooted. Indeed, the Supreme Court just today called for the parties’ views on how Governor Greitens’ order affects their case.

I’ve recently written on this case here. But a short backgrounder is appropriate. Trinity Lutheran Church applied for a generally available grant from DNR to obtain materials to build a playground. Although Trinity Lutheran Church had one of the highest ranking applications, DNR denied the church a grant solely because it is a religious institution. DNR cited Missouri’s Blaine Amendment, a provision in its state constitution that prohibits Missouri from supporting religious groups. Thus, Trinity Lutheran Church sued DNR, alleging that it violated the Free Exercise Clause and the Equal Protection Clause by denying it a grant.

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Will Judge Gorsuch inspire other jurists?

This evening, President Trump—after a day that felt more like the final episode of The Apprentice than a Supreme Court nomination vetting process—nominated 10th Circuit Judge Neil Gorsuch to fill the late Justice Antonin Scalia’s seat.Judge Gorsuch—a Colorado native, Harvard Law graduate, and clerk for two Supreme Court Justices—is undoubtedly an elite legal mind and writer, fit to replace the legal lion that is Justice Scalia. Yet, back in July most legal observers would not have picked Judge Gorsuch to replace Justice Scalia. Putting aside the unlikely probability that Donald Trump would win the election, Judge Gorsuch was not on Trump’s list of eleven potential Supreme Court nominees he released in May 2016. Rather, Judg633219496-judge-neil-gorsuch-speaks-after-us-president-donald-jpg-crop-promo-xlarge2e Gorsuch appeared on Trump’s addendum to the original list released in September 2016.

Was there anything that happened between May and September that elevated Judge Gorsuch’s status? Well yes. In August, Judge Gorsuch wrote a blistering concurring opinion criticizing Chevron deference in Gutierrez-Brizuela v. Lynch, a seemingly ordinary immigration case. In Chevron v. Natural Resource Defense Council, the Court held that the judiciary will defer to an agency’s interpretation of a statute if the statute is ambiguous. Judge Gorsuch sharply attacked Chevron deference, noting that it obliterates Separation of Powers principles.

Judge Gorsuch’s concurrence was met with wide praise in conservative legal circles and he rocketed up Court Watchers’ Supreme Court shortlist. Indeed, other jurists on Trump’s list earned wide praise for their concurring opinions in seemingly simple cases. For instance, Justice Don Willet of the Texas Supreme Court earned national recognition after writing a concurring opinion in Patel v. Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation that aggressively defended economic liberty—a subject that has long been dear to legal libertarians.

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