Morning Docket: 01.03.17

* Kellyanne Conway, President-elect Trump's campaign manager, has accepted a position as his counselor once his administration takes over at the White House, and now her husband, George Conway of Wachtell Lipton, has found himself on the shortlist to become the U.S. solicitor general. He's argued only one Supreme Court case, which is unusual for those being considered for the position. [Bloomberg Politics] * In his year-end report on the federal judiciary, Chief Justice John Roberts managed to steer clear of controversial topics -- such as the high court being short handed since Justice Scalia's death or the Senate's failure to confirm Judge Merrill Garland -- instead choosing to focus on the "underappreciated" role of district court judges, writing that "[t]his is no job for impulsive, timid, or inattentive souls." [Washington Post] * "There’s no legitimacy to a Supreme Court justice in a seat that’s been stolen from one administration and handed to another. We need to do everything we possibly can to block it." When it comes to the confirmation process for President-elect Trump's SCOTUS nominee, we can expect to see a battle thanks to Senate Democrats in the wake of Senate Republicans' obstruction of Judge Garland's nomination. [The Guardian] * One day before they were set to go into effect, Judge Reed O'Connor of the Northern District of Texas issued a nationwide injunction on the enforcement of the Affordable Care Act's protections for transgender and abortion-related healthcare services. O'Connor is the same judge who issued a nationwide injunction on the enforcement of the Obama administration's transgender protections in schools. [BuzzFeed] * Convicted Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof, who is representing himself for the penalty phase of his trial, has rejected a defense based on mental illness because he is "morally opposed to psychology." He'll make an opening statement, but won't call any witnesses or present any evidence. If Roof is sentenced to death, it will be the first time a jury has done so in a case involving a federal hate crimes law. [New York Times]

Kellyanne Conway (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty)

Kellyanne Conway (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty)

* Kellyanne Conway, President-elect Trump’s campaign manager, has accepted a position as his counselor once his administration takes over at the White House, and now her husband, George Conway of Wachtell Lipton, has found himself on the shortlist to become the U.S. solicitor general. He’s argued only one Supreme Court case, which is unusual for those being considered for the position. [Bloomberg Politics]

* In his year-end report on the federal judiciary, Chief Justice John Roberts managed to steer clear of controversial topics — such as the high court being short handed since Justice Scalia’s death or the Senate’s failure to confirm Judge Merrill Garland — instead choosing to focus on the “underappreciated” role of district court judges, writing that “[t]his is no job for impulsive, timid, or inattentive souls.” [Washington Post]

* “There’s no legitimacy to a Supreme Court justice in a seat that’s been stolen from one administration and handed to another. We need to do everything we possibly can to block it.” When it comes to the confirmation process for President-elect Trump’s SCOTUS nominee, we can expect to see a battle thanks to Senate Democrats in the wake of Senate Republicans’ obstruction of Judge Garland’s nomination. [The Guardian]

* One day before they were set to go into effect, Judge Reed O’Connor of the Northern District of Texas issued a nationwide injunction on the enforcement of the Affordable Care Act’s protections for transgender and abortion-related healthcare services. O’Connor is the same judge who issued a nationwide injunction on the enforcement of the Obama administration’s transgender protections in schools. [BuzzFeed]

* Convicted Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof, who is representing himself for the penalty phase of his trial, has rejected a defense based on mental illness because he is “morally opposed to psychology.” He’ll make an opening statement, but won’t call any witnesses or present any evidence. If Roof is sentenced to death, it will be the first time a jury has done so in a case involving a federal hate crimes law. [New York Times]

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Staci ZaretskyStaci Zaretsky is an editor at Above the Law. She’d love to hear from you, so feel free to email her with any tips, questions, or comments. You can follow her on Twitter or connect with her on LinkedIn.

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