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92 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. Arguendo 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/gwargu92 and id is 1 raw text is: 







The Court That Does Not Let Standing Stand

                               in  Its  Way


                               Alan B. Morrison*

                                  ABSTRACT

        Article III of the Constitution limits the power of the federal courts to
    adjudicating cases and controversies. Embedded in that concept are the separate
    and sometimes overlapping doctrines of standing, ripeness, political question,
    mootness, and the overall responsibility of the courts to assure both that they are
    deciding legal issues only where there are real parties with an actual dispute
    between them and that a court is the proper institution to resolve it. That proposition
    is not in dispute, but, as Biden v. Nebraska demonstrates, its application to
    particular cases is very much a source of disagreement.

         Traditionally, the Supreme Court has been quite strict on standing, in my view
    more so than is necessary or appropriate in some cases. But under the Roberts
    Court, these barriers have come down, at least in those cases where the
    conservative majority wishes to reach the merits. That change has not been across
    the board, and its selectivity is one of its problems. From the perspective of this
    observer, under the Roberts Court, the requirements ofArticle III are relaxed when
    the majority is eager to decide a case that enables the conservative majority to do
    what  it did in Nebraska: issue a decision that is consistent with its policy
    preferences.

                            TABLE   OF CONTENTS

IN TR O D U C TIO N ......................................................................................... ..  1
    I. THE  TRADITIONAL VIEW: FOUR EXAMPLES .................................. 3
    II. STANDING   ON D EM AND  .................................................................. 5
C O N C L U SIO N  .......................................................................................... ..  17

                               INTRODUCTION

     [The  rules on  standing]  may  sound   technical, but they  enforce
     fundamental   limits on federal judicial power.  They  keep courts
     acting like courts. Or  stated the other way   around, they  prevent
     courts from acting  like this Court does today. The plaintiffs in this
     case are six States that have  no personal  stake in the Secretary's
     loan forgiveness plan. They  are classic ideological plaintiffs: They
     think the plan a very bad idea, but they are no worse off because the
     Secretary differs. In giving those States a forum-in adjudicating
     their complaint-the   Court  forgets its proper role. The Court  acts


     * Associate Dean, George Washington University Law School, where he teaches civil
procedure and constitutional law. He has participated as counsel for a party or an amicus in a
number of the cases discussed in this Essay.

September 2023 Vol. 92 Arg


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