Nothing says “we respect the time it takes to get it right” like the Supreme Court denying a reporter’s emergency request to pause the next step—then vacating the Chief Justice’s temporary handling order—so the fight continues but the consequences are still scheduled to keep showing up. It’s like the court is running a customer-service line where the hold music never stops, even when they tell you, “Your call is important to us.”
Here’s the sequence that makes my paperwork-with-teeth itch: the Court denied Catherine Herridge’s emergency stay, and then, in a separate misc. order, it vacated the Chief Justice’s earlier temporary order for how the matter was being handled. In plain terms, the Court adjusted the “temporary” part—without delivering the “emergency” part. The reporting around the decision frames it the same way: enforcement and/or sanction mechanics keep moving unless a stay is actually granted.
And that’s the contradiction right there. If the whole point of judicial process is that time is sometimes needed to do things carefully, why does “time is needed” only apply to the step you’re asking to be paused—while the enforcement/surcharge timeline keeps running on a daily basis like it’s got a union contract? I’m not asking for magic. I’m asking why the system can’t stop the meter when the meter is the one doing the harm during the waiting period.
This is the kind of due process theater that looks great in a robe and feels awful in a mailbox. In public, the Court can say “wait for review,” and the building can continue to sound dignified. In reality, ordinary people don’t experience “review” as a pause—they experience it as an accumulating bill, every day the calendar is allowed to be the enforcement strategy.
So the vibe check is: take your time—just don’t expect the consequences to. SCOTUS basically handed down a procedural reminder that the pause button only works for the optics, not for the clock. And if that’s the plan, at least be honest about what’s being processed: not justice, but the next day of the charge.
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