Outside the White House, Jan. 25, 2017 Credit: Mike Maguire.

In the founders’ day, the ratio between the most and least populous state was 12 to one. Today it’s 67 to one; by 2030, it’s expected to reach 81 to one. 

We're in this place because the Constitution is increasingly out of date, and the issue of over-representation by rural states is almost impossible to roll back.
↩︎ Jacobin
Feb 2, 2017

The travel ban isn't built to last. It will go to the Supreme Court, and it will lose.

Border Patrol, apparently under orders only from the top, is spawning panic from some who take their refusal to cooperate with court-mandated Federal Marshals as a sign for existential concern. But will the confusion trigger a constitutional crisis? Here's a good rundown of the cross-cutting legal ramifications of the travel ban. In short, there are plenty of reasons to think SCOTUS will eventually strike the order down. Some, such as the writ of habeas corpus filed at Dulles for two teens held without explanation and under coercion, hinge on pointing out how the implementation of the ban violated rights. Other lawsuits will strike to the core of the issue by arguing the order violates the Equal Protections Clause of the 14th Amendment.

It could take months, if not years, to play out, but in short the center of the Court is unlikely to side with Trump on this one.

Feb 2, 2017
More Headlines