This essay takes up questions regarding whether initiative proponents and legislators can defend a law in federal court when the government declines to defend. Looking first at intervention under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, I argue that neither has the cognizable interest needed to enter an ongoing lawsuit as a party. Yet even if they are allowed to intervene, these would-be defenders of state or federal law cannot take on the government’s mantle to satisfy Article III because the government’s standing derives from the risk to its enforcement powers, which is an interest that cannot be delegated to others. Nor can they make out any more than a desire to have the law enforced consistent with their views, which is the sort of genera...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
In this very brief Essay, I focus on aspects of a topic on which both Danny and I have written and o...
Litigation which Chayes labeled “public law litigation” grew especially quickly in the decade immedi...
A new brand of plaintiff has come to federal court. In cases involving the Affordable Care Act, the ...
In recent years, legislatures and their members have increasingly asserted standing to sue other bra...
Judges have concluded that states do not have standing based on their quasi-sovereign interests to s...
In this short Essay, I focus on only one aspect of the broader question of government standing to su...
Many commentators express concern that democracy in the United States is under threat, whether from ...
Consent decrees raise serious Article III concerns. When litigants agree on their rights and jointly...
Unless the plaintiff has a personal stake in the outcome, Article III of the United States Constitut...
Two fundamental standing problems plague Proposition 8’s proponents and the Bipartisan Legal Advisor...
The Supreme Court insists that Article III of the Constitution requires a litigant to have standing ...
Although Article I of the Constitution vests legislative power in the Congress, the lawmaking proces...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
A major procedural question looms over the two marriage cases currently before the U.S. Supreme Cour...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
In this very brief Essay, I focus on aspects of a topic on which both Danny and I have written and o...
Litigation which Chayes labeled “public law litigation” grew especially quickly in the decade immedi...
A new brand of plaintiff has come to federal court. In cases involving the Affordable Care Act, the ...
In recent years, legislatures and their members have increasingly asserted standing to sue other bra...
Judges have concluded that states do not have standing based on their quasi-sovereign interests to s...
In this short Essay, I focus on only one aspect of the broader question of government standing to su...
Many commentators express concern that democracy in the United States is under threat, whether from ...
Consent decrees raise serious Article III concerns. When litigants agree on their rights and jointly...
Unless the plaintiff has a personal stake in the outcome, Article III of the United States Constitut...
Two fundamental standing problems plague Proposition 8’s proponents and the Bipartisan Legal Advisor...
The Supreme Court insists that Article III of the Constitution requires a litigant to have standing ...
Although Article I of the Constitution vests legislative power in the Congress, the lawmaking proces...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
A major procedural question looms over the two marriage cases currently before the U.S. Supreme Cour...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
In this very brief Essay, I focus on aspects of a topic on which both Danny and I have written and o...
Litigation which Chayes labeled “public law litigation” grew especially quickly in the decade immedi...