Supreme Court meets Friday to decide 6 remaining cases, including birthright citizenship
- The Supreme Court met on Friday, June 26, 2025, for its final public session to decide six remaining cases including President Trump's birthright citizenship order.
- This session followed lower court rulings that had unanimously blocked Trump's executive order denying citizenship to children of undocumented immigrants nationwide.
- Other cases before the justices concerned challenges to Louisiana's congressional map, limitations on federal judges' authority to issue nationwide injunctions, and Texas laws requiring online age verification for porn sites.
- The Supreme Court has issued 14 rulings on Trump administration policies this term, ruling mostly in favor of the administration but with several mixed decisions and some against it.
- The Court's decisions could reshape limits on injunctions, impact immigration policy, and influence future litigation concerning executive orders and voting maps.
386 Articles
386 Articles
What the Supreme Court did to America in 2025
Justice Neil Gorsuch, left, and Chief Justice John Roberts. There are two big winners in the Supreme Court’s most recent term. One is social and religious conservatives. In the last two days of its term, the Court imposed heavy new burdens on public schools at the request of religious conservatives, and it rendered much of federal Medicaid law unenforceable in a case lashing out at Planned Parenthood. It heard its first major pornography case i…
Last Friday the Supreme Court closed a victorious judicial course for Donald Trump in the same way it did with the previous one in July 2024: giving more power to the president, and with him, to the institution that the Republican represents.
This Supreme Court Term Proves the System Still Works
The Supreme Court closed out its 2024-2025 term with a series of much-heralded victories for the right. In CASA, Inc., the Court ruled that district courts could no longer use nationwide injunctions to block major initiatives launched by President Donald Trump. In Skrmetti, the Court upheld a state ban on sex-change procedures for minors. A half-dozen 6-3 decisions showed the Court’s conservative majority dominant and united. All of this has pro…
Supreme Court pushes right in term stocked with Trump cases
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority continued to march American law toward the right during its term that ended last week, in a steady stream of 6-3 decisions in major cases along with a flood of emergency appeals sparked by the Trump administration. The two dynamics played out over the past months in decisions such as those that upheld Republican-backed actions to ban gender-affirming care and exclude Planned Parenthood from federal funds…
By limiting nationwide injunctions, Supreme Court declares ‘open season on all our rights’
In a ruling that stems from the president's birthright citizenship order, the "conservative supermajority just took away lower courts' single most powerful tool for reining in the Trump administration's lawless excesses."
‘Only There Because She's a Black Woman’: Charlie Kirk's ‘Diversity Hire’ Jab at Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson Backfires as Critics Roast Him for Dropping Out of Community College While She Graduated Magna Cum Laude from Harvard
Conservative firebrand Charlie Kirk sparked fresh outrage Friday after attacking Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson as a “diversity hire” in the aftermath of a pivotal 6-3 ruling that handed a major victory to President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda. “Ketanji Brown Jackson is a diversity hire. She is only there because she’s a black woman,” the Turning Point USA co-founder posted Friday on X, drawing immediate backlash, as critics b…
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