A very quick explainer on why Justice Jackson issued an "administrative stay" in the SNAP case late on Friday night [View all]
https://www.stevevladeck.com/p/190-snap-wtf
I wanted to put out a very brief post to try to provide a bit of context for Justice Jacksons
single-justice order, handed down shortly after 9 p.m. EST on Friday night, that imposed an administrative stay of a district court order that wouldve required the Trump administration to use various contingency funds to pay out critical benefits under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
It may surprise folks that Justice Jackson, who has been one of the most vocal critics of the Courts behavior on emergency applications from the Trump administration, acquiesced in even a temporary pause of the district courts ruling in this case. But as I read the order, which says a lot more than a typical administrative stay from the Court, Jackson was stuck between a rock and a hard placegiven the incredibly compressed timing that was created by the circumstances of the case.
In a world in which Justice Jackson either knew or suspected that at least five of the justices would grant temporary relief to the Trump administration if she didnt, the way she structured the stay means that she was able to try to control the timing of the Supreme Courts (forthcoming) reviewand to create pressure for it to happen faster than it otherwise might have. In other words, its a compromiseone with which not everyone will agree, but which strikes me as eminently defensible under these unique (and, lets be clear, maddening and entirely f-ing avoidable) circumstances.
I. How We Got Here
Everyone agrees that, among the many increasingly painful results of the government shutdown, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) can no longer spend the funds Congress appropriated to cover SNAPa program that helps to fund food purchases for one in eight (42 million!) Americans. Everyone also agrees that there are other sources of appropriated money that the President has the statutory authority to rely upon to at least partially fund SNAP benefits for the month of November. The two questions that have provoked the most legal debate is whether (1) he has the authority to fully fund SNAP; and (2) either way, whether federal courts can order him to use whatever authorities he has.
snip