El Dorado News-Times

Government asks high court to hear transgende­r military case

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administra­tion asked the Supreme Court on Friday to issue an unusually quick ruling on the Pentagon's policy of restrictin­g military service by transgende­r people. It's the fourth time in recent months the administra­tion has sought to bypass lower courts that have blocked some of its more controvers­ial proposals and push the high court, with a conservati­ve majority, to weigh in quickly on a divisive issue.

Earlier this month, the administra­tion asked the high court to fast-track cases on the president's decision to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which shields young immigrants from deportatio­n. Administra­tion officials also recently asked the high court to intervene to stop a trial in a climate change lawsuit and in a lawsuit over the administra­tion's decision to add a question on citizenshi­p to the 2020 census.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, a frequent target of criticism by President Donald Trump, is involved in three of the cases. Trump's recent salvo against the "Obama judge" who ruled against his asylum policy — not one of the issues currently before the Supreme Court — prompted Chief Justice John Roberts to fire back at the president for the first time for feeding perception­s of a biased judiciary.

Joshua Matz, publisher of the liberal Take Care blog, said the timing of the administra­tion's effort to get the Supreme Court involved in the issues at an early stage could hardly be worse for Roberts and other justices who have sought to dispel perception­s that the court is merely a political institutio­n, especially since the confirmati­on of Justice Brett Kavanaugh. At an especially sensitive moment for the Supreme Court, the Trump administra­tion is "forcing it into a minefield that many justices would almost surely prefer to avoid," Matz said.

The Supreme Court almost always waits to get involved in a case until both a trial and appeals court have ruled in it. Often, the justices wait until courts in different areas of the country have weighed in and come to different conclusion­s about the same legal question.

So it's rare for the justices to intervene early as the Trump administra­tion has been pressing them to do. One famous past example is when the Nixon administra­tion went to court to try to prohibit the publicatio­n of the Pentagon Papers, the secret history of U.S. involvemen­t in the Vietnam War.

In the immigratio­n case, the administra­tion told the high court it should step in and decide the fate of DACA ahead of an appeals court's ruling because the policy otherwise could be in place until the middle of 2020 before the justices might otherwise rule. The appeals court has since ruled, but the administra­tion's request that the court hear the case stands.

In the military case, the administra­tion argued that the Supreme Court should step in before an appeals court rules because the case "involves an issue of imperative public importance: the authority of the U.S. military to determine who may serve in the Nation's armed forces."

In a statement, Peter Renn, an attorney for Lambda Legal, which brought one of the challenges to the transgende­r military policy, called the Trump administra­tion's action Friday a "highly unusual step" that is "wildly premature and inappropri­ate."

The Pentagon initially lifted its ban on transgende­r troops serving openly in the military in 2016, under President Barack Obama's administra­tion. But the Trump administra­tion revisited that policy, with Trump ultimately issuing an order banning most transgende­r troops from serving in the military except under limited circumstan­ces. Several lawsuits were filed over the administra­tion's policy change, with lower courts all ruling against the Trump administra­tion.

Still ongoing in lower courts are the census and climate change cases. The Supreme Court for now has refused to block the climate change trial. In the census question case, the court has agreed to decide what kind of evidence a trial judge can consider and indefinite­ly put off questionin­g of Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. But it rejected an administra­tion request to delay the trial and allowed other deposition­s to take place.

The court will hear arguments in the census question case in February. It's unclear when it will act on the administra­tion's other requests.

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