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.
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288 Articles

Read what the Supreme Court justices said in the birthright citizenship case
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision Friday to curb nationwide injunctions that challenge the Trump administration‘s policies left the fate of birthright citizenship — and other challenges California has mounted to White House policies — a bit unclear. • Continue reading: What does the Supreme Court’s decision on nationwide injunctions and birthright citizenship mean for Southern California? View this document on Scribd Related Articles …
Amy Coney Barrett rips Ketanji Brown Jackson over dissent in birthright citizenship case
Conservative Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett stunned veteran bench watchers Friday with a blunt takedown of liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson's "extreme" dissent in the landmark birthright citizenship case in which the Supreme Court curtailed lower court use of nationwide injunctions.
High court limits judges’ power to block birthright citizenship order | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
WASHINGTON >> The U.S. Supreme Court dealt a blow today to the power of federal judges by restricting their ability to grant broad legal relief in cases as the justices acted in a fight over President Donald Trump’s bid to limit birthright citizenship, ordering lower courts that blocked his policy to reconsider the scope of their orders.
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