Simmering tensions between traditionalist Republican judges and MAGA judges are starting to boil over.

A federal court isĀ picking an unusual fightĀ with one of the federal judiciaryā€™s governing bodies ā€” one with implications for literally all aspects of US policy.

In March, the Judicial Conference of the United States, one of the federal courtsā€™ internal governing bodies, announced aĀ new policy intended to combat ā€œjudge-shopping.ā€Ā Some federal courts effectively allow plaintiffs to choose their own judges, which has allowed many litigants withĀ dubiousĀ or evenĀ ridiculousĀ claims to obtain court orders blocking pretty much any federal policy that they find objectionable.

One court that allowed such judge-shopping, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas, announced on Friday thatĀ it will defy the Judicial ConferenceĀ and refuse to implement the new policy. This defiance, if allowed to stand, would render the Judicial Conferenceā€™s new policy virtually useless, as the Northern District of Texas is the locus of the nationā€™s worst problem with judge-shopping.

Among other things, the fact that many right-wing plaintiffs can select Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk to hear their lawsuits has turned this obscure Trump appointee to this Texas federal courtĀ into one of the most powerful public officials in the country.

Kacsmaryk is a former lawyer at a Christian right law firm with aĀ long record of hostilityĀ towardĀ LGBTQĀ rights,Ā abortion, andĀ even many forms of heterosexual sexuality. He is the judge whoĀ attempted to ban the abortion medication mifepristone. And, in his brief period on the bench, heā€™s handed down a long line of orders implementing right-wingĀ policiesĀ onĀ birth control,Ā immigration, andĀ LGBTQ discrimination. He even backed aĀ ban on theater performances he finds objectionable.

  • Rapidcreek@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    "Congressional Republicans, including nearly the entire Senate GOP Conference, signed onto a Supreme Court brief in January backing former President Donald Trump when Colorado state officials tried> to prevent him from being on the ballot over his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection,ā€Ā Punchbowl NewsĀ reports.

    ā€œBut that same level of support from Hill Republicans for Trump hasnā€™t materialized on a separate and equally high-profile argument to the high court ā€” that Trump has absolute immunity from criminal prosecution related to any official actions as president.ā€

    ā€œIn fact, the deadline for submitting a brief in support of Trumpā€™s position in the immunity case has already passed.ā€

    Not in the article, but maybe on point.