There is nothing to get around.

The Judge in the district court ruled in favor of the petitioner. The petitioner doesn’t have to request anything. The court issued the injunction the petitioner requested.

The respondent (i.e. the government) is the one that has to make an appeal.

The injunction is what the district court issued. The respondent will appeal and request a stay of the injunction already issued.

Different case with different legal arguments. Injunctions and ruling apply to the circumstances of the case being ruled on. Different cases with different legal arguments are not subject to the rulings of the court for a different set of circumstances.

#1. The court in Trump v. Serra issued a permanent injunction not a temporary one. The stay is temporary depending on the actions of the respondent (the government). If they don’t appeal the case to the SCOTUS the permanent injunction becomes active again. If the SCOTUS denies the writ the permanent injunction becomes active again.

#2 Never said the SCOTUS stayed the second injunction out of the Western District in Texas.

The court wouldn’t have invited to appeal a case the petitioner won. The court wouldn’t have invited to so seek and injunction.

The court would have told teh respondent they can appeal seeking a stay of the injunction.

Different case different legal arguments. SCOTUS will have no issue with the Western Texas District court issuing a ruling in a different case since the SCOTUS has not accepted the writ that hasn’t been filed yet, not heard oral arguments in the case, nor rendered a binding decision. Which even they won’t be binding on a case with different legal arguments.
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