Supreme Court Has a Packed House for Trump Tariffs Case
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SCOTUSblog on MSN
In tariff cases, verbs rather than major pronouncements about presidential power give the court the off-ramp it’s looking for
Clear Statements is a recurring series by Abbe R. Gluck on civil litigation and the modern regulatory and statutory state. Verbs, verbs, verbs. Court-watchers hoping for fireworks over the reach of
Justice Clarence Thomas, the court’s longest serving member, customarily asks the first question during oral arguments, and today was no different. Thomas kicked off the questioning by asking Solicito
The Mirror US on MSN
Major setback for LGBTQ+ rights as Supreme Court backs Trump’s birth-sex passport rule
The decision follows others by the nation's highest court that have allowed the Trump administration to target LGBTQ+ citizens.
In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson signed the landmark Voting Rights Act, declaring that "today is a triumph for freedom as huge as any victory that has ever been won on any battlefield." But over the last 12 years, the increasingly conservative Supreme ...
President Donald Trump said he may attend next month’s Supreme Court oral arguments in a key tariffs case that could decide the future of his trade policy. His attendance would make Trump the first sitting president ever to witness Supreme Court ...
President Donald Trump and his legal team may have made a huge "strategic blunder" in defending the president's "reciprocal tariffs" scheme at the Supreme Court this week, Adam Liptak wrote for The New York Times in an analysis published on Friday — and it could have big implications for the outcome of the case.