Gwynn ap Nudd, on 22 April 2022 - 01:23 AM, said:
Whether mask wearing is still required/justified is really not the point of the articles IMO. It is the judicial activism by republican judges and application of their made up doctrines of "major questions" and "non-delegation" to gut the mandates of federal agencies and hobble government when Democrats are in power. You should expect to see more legislating from the bench than from congress at this point.
Yes, but the factual question may be relevant to the appeal: while she argued that the CDC never has legal authority to institute mask mandates, she also argued that even if that's not true, the situation wasn't 'urgent' enough to do so without giving time for public comment:
'the case turns in part on whether the C.D.C. was justified in enacting the mandate as an emergency measure that offered no room for public notice or comment, it is notable that the administration appealed the ruling while not seeking an immediate stay. The failure to try to keep the mask order in place could undercut the government's argument that there was an urgent need for the requirement; otherwise it would have tried to keep it in place, legal specialists say.
If the government really wanted to fight its appeal all the way to a decision on whether to overturn[...] "then they totally botched this, because it's Thursday and the ruling was on Monday and they haven't done anything about it yet."
But [...] the failure to seek a stay may make sense if the Biden legal team was instead trying to protect the C.D.C.'s power with no real intention of trying to get a higher court to reinstate the mask mandate.
[...] if a case is on appeal when the dispute becomes moot for reasons unrelated to the litigation, an appeals court can remand it to the district court with instructions not only to dismiss the case but to vacate the district court's ruling — meaning wipe it from the books
[...]
[...] after the mandate's planned expiration on May 3.
Both she and a majority of the appeals court that oversees her court were appointed by [...] Trump, whose legal advisers openly promoted their search for potential judges who would be skeptical of the power of regulatory agencies.
[...] standards for winning a request to stay a judicial order can be even higher than for an appeal. Fighting for one and losing it, she said, would raise particular risks of an appeals court decision that could take a similarly narrow view of what the C.D.C. may do in a public health crisis — and that, unlike a district court ruling, would also be a binding precedent.
[...] the administration has been deliberately moving away from masking as an essential pandemic tool for weeks.'
Why Hasn't the U.S. Asked for a Stay in the Mask Mandate Case? - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
PO(tu)S Biden is probably going for a quick concentrated surge so he can go back to claiming it's over for the summer, in hopes a resurgence of spending on the service sector will bring down demand for goods enough to reduce inflation (and mitigate the perceived need for interest rate increases that could plunge the economy into a recession)... but that's almost certainly going to get wiped out by new variants before the midterms, unless there's a more effective vaccine---especially against transmission---or more effective treatments that also greatly reduce the risk of long covid.
'Legal experts slam the judge who axed the mask mandate
The Biden administration argues that masks are categorized as a form of "sanitation," according to the law, but [...] she's opted "for a much narrower definition of the term that would exclude measures like face coverings;" an interpretation legal experts strongly disagree with.
[...] "Specifically, the law says that if the government is trying to prevent the spread of communicable diseases, it can 'provide for such inspection, fumigation, disinfection, sanitation, [...] and other measures, as in his judgment may be necessary.'"
[...] "It reads like someone who had decided the case and then tried to dress it up as legal reasoning without actually doing the legal reasoning," [...]
[...] "substituted her own definition of 'sanitation'" while "brushing aside a legal norm known as 'agency deference' that compels judges to yield to the interpretation of federal agencies when a law's language is unclear."
[...] "Even if we're skeptical about agencies or even about Congress's ability to make good judgments in this ... time," [...] "we certainly do not want these decisions to be in the hands of a single unelected judge."'
Legal experts slam the judge who axed the mask mandate - Alternet.org
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 22 April 2022 - 04:05 PM