The US Supreme Court has been relatively quiet in the immediate run-up to the new year, with no major opinions or arguments issued in the past three days as the justices wrap up their session ahead of 2026. The Court building remains open to the public today from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., offering courtroom lectures, but no oral arguments or emergency applications were heard. SCOTUSblog reports that on December 23, the justices rejected President Trump's emergency request to deploy National Guard troops in Illinois, upholding a federal judge's order that found no clear authority for the military to enforce laws there at this stage—this marks the second recent setback for the administration on the shadow docket. Looking just ahead, USA TODAY highlights how 2025 saw the Court repeatedly side with Trump on shadow docket matters, allowing tariffs, foreign aid cuts, and immigration actions to proceed amid ongoing lawsuits, setting up blockbuster 2026 decisions on issues like the legality of those tariffs, transgender athletes in sports, birthright citizenship, Louisiana redistricting claims of voter disenfranchisement, and ballot deadlines in key states. Fox Business notes legal analyst Gregg Jarrett discussing these high-stakes cases on December 30, emphasizing their potential to reshape economic policy and civil rights. With the term advancing, expect the docket to heat up soon after the holiday break.
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