Supreme Court Is Buckling Up for a Season of Legal Showdowns Over Trump Policies
- The Trump administration is involved in a legal fight with Judge James Boasberg over deporting Venezuelan gang members.
- A study from Harvard Law Review indicates an increase in nationwide injunctions, with judges issuing at least 15 in Trump’s first two months in office.
- Justice Samuel Alito criticized the authority of district-court judges in issuing nationwide injunctions, stating that no single judge should compel the government to pay taxpayer dollars.
- The Public Interest Legal Foundation argues against birthright citizenship, asserting that Supreme Court precedent does not support universal citizenship for children of undocumented individuals.
5 Articles
5 Articles
Trump's appeals are piling up for the Supreme Court
Trump is currently fighting to freeze federal funding, deport foreign gang members, fire thousands of federal workers, reinterpret birthright citizenship, and to achieve a host of other objectives. District courts have obstructed many of these plans.
Supreme Court Is Buckling Up for a Season of Legal Showdowns Over Trump Policies
The US Justice Department is fast-tracking fights over President Donald Trump’s efforts to push the bounds of executive power, teeing up key issues for the US Supreme Court in the coming weeks or even days.
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