President Biden is trying to unwind a Trump-era policy that permits the rapid expulsion of migrants. Critics want the Supreme Court to stop him.
Author: John Fritze, USA TODAY
Appeals court clears the way to end removal of migrants under Title 42, setting up Supreme Court review
At issue is a Trump-era policy known as Title 42 that permits the rapid expulsion of migrants over public health concerns because of COVID-19.
Supreme Court takes up second case on Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan
The latest emergency appeal from the Biden administration means there are now two separate cases on the loan forgiveness plan at the Supreme Court.
Supreme Court to hear First Amendment case of man who promised immigrants path to citizenship
The case arrives at the Supreme Court two years after the justices settled a similar dispute over the immigration law on procedural grounds.
‘Big consequences’: Supreme Court grapples with case some warn could upend federal elections
Voting rights groups say the case could upend federal elections but others say state courts have overstepped their authority over voting laws.
Supreme Court pressed to give state legislatures more power to oversee federal elections
The Supreme Court will hear arguments about whether the Constitution cuts state courts out of the mix for reviewing laws governing federal elections.
Supreme Court to debate whether businesses may decline to provide services to same-sex weddings
The challenge from a web designer who wants to decline to make same-sex wedding sites revisits a legal question the Supreme Court dodged in 2018.
Supreme Court denies Donald Trump request to block release of tax returns to House panel
Trump’s record at the Supreme Court is not particularly good, even though he nominated three of the court’s current associate justices.
Biden’s ability to bypass Congress, starting with student debt relief, faces ‘major’ legal hurdle
Courts put Biden’s plan to forgive student loan debt on pause. An emerging approach from the Supreme Court could put other policies in jeopardy, too.
For Native Americans, a 1978 adoption law protects children. Critics see a racial preference.
The Supreme Court is already weighing the fate of affirmative action. Now it must decide the constitutionality of a law on Native American adoptions.