I no longer recall the standard for a SCOTUS stay but "irreparable harm" should be in the mix.
		
		
	 
It 
IS in the mix.
One of the problems for Utah has been the state's 
inability to demonstrate that it has been harmed by gay marriage. In fact, all of the evidence seems to support the harm being suffered as exclusively by gay people who want to marry, 
not the state of Utah. 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			By conceding the couples will suffer indignity and harm they seem to have given away the ballgame.  To me bad lawyering seems to have left the cat out of the box.
		
		
	 
Yes, exactly.
Fortunately for us, Utah's representation has been nothing short of incompetent. Every time they open their mouths, they say things that hurt their case. 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			I don't see that the trial judge usurped his authority.  He had two choices: constitutional or unconstitutional.
		
		
	 
I agree. 
Utah's argument that Judge Shelby usurped his authority by ruling on the constitutionality of Utah's gay marriage constitutional amendment is strange. The lawsuit presented to Shelby's court was challenging the Utah law. Regardless of which way he ruled, he had no choice but to rule on the law. And that is the responsibility of his court, anyway.
I am no lawyer, but I do not understand the logic of challenging Shelby's authority to rule on Utah law. I thought that was what Shelby was 
expected to do.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Is Boise, Idaho known as a bastion of Constitutional argument?  I know nothing of the firm the state engaged.
		
		
	 
Boise is a bastion of Mormon conservatism. 
All the lawyers in Stewart, Taylor, & Morris are BYU law graduates. 
It seems to me that Utah would have done better to get outside help that is not so beholden to its own Mormon thinking. This is intellectual inbreeding. The arguments have not been very successful to date. Does Utah really think that someone else making the same arguments that have failed for them will somehow succeed?
Utah really doesn't seem to understand how stupid have been their arguments. I find that fact remarkable. My theory is that the people of Utah have become so accustomed to blind acceptance of the authority of their church that they have lost the ability to reason and to question. People there dare not argue ideas persuasively, because the persuasive argument of new ideas for them is so often blasphemy. 
The Mormon church is profoundly authoritarian. One of the surest ways to get excommunicated is to question the church's (oddly demonstrably) false teachings. So, they have put in place a culture that does not tolerate questioning church teachings.  But that willingness to accept and believe the absurd because it comes from the authority of the church does not serve them well in federal court.