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US Supreme Court Tackles Pivotal Cases on Transgender Athletes, Gun Rights, and Executive Power
Published 2 months, 3 weeks ago
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The US Supreme Court has been active with upcoming arguments and pending high-stakes cases tied to the Trump administration. Oral arguments in the January session kick off on Monday, January 12, covering transgender athletes in sports, the latest developments in gun rights under the Second Amendment, and President Trump's push to remove Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook amid charges of mortgage fraud. The justices signaled potential opinions as early as Friday at 10 a.m. EST, possibly including a major tariff case challenging Trump's global tariff program. On the Second Amendment front, Ohio Attorney General Raúl Labrador filed an amicus brief on January 5 in case 24-542, urging the Ninth Circuit to affirm an injunction against California's ammunition background check and anti-importation rules, arguing they lack historical analogues under Bruen and burden protected conduct like buying ammo for lawful firearms. Looking ahead, Trump v. Barbara looms as a pivotal 2026 clash over the Fourteenth Amendment's Citizenship Clause, testing whether the president can deny birthright citizenship to children of certain non-citizens via executive order, with lower courts so far blocking it. The court recently showed restraint by denying Trump's bid to deploy the National Guard to Chicago and other cities for immigration enforcement in an unsigned order before Christmas, prompting a dissent from Justice Alito and forcing withdrawals from those operations. Other ripples include the Ninth Circuit declining to rehear a Trump administration challenge to a discovery order in a mass layoffs suit against federal unions, and ongoing buzz about cases like Trump v. Slaughter on agency independence and FTC Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter's removal protections. While state courts grab headlines—like Wyoming's Supreme Court striking down abortion bans including the nation's first explicit pill ban on Tuesday—no major US Supreme Court opinions dropped in the immediate run-up, keeping focus on these brewing disputes over executive power, guns, and constitutional limits.
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Thanks for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI