Florida, SCOTUS and immigration
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Trump, SCOTUS and birthright citizenship
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Federal employees in Maryland anxiously await the Supreme Court’s decision on whether the Trump administration will be allowed to proceed with firing thousands of federal government workers.
"President Trump will keep winning against Liberal Lawfare, as he is focusing on his mission to Make America Great Again," a Trump spokesperson said
Lower court judges on the front lines of the onslaught of litigation over President Trump’s controversial policies aren’t getting a lifeline from the Supreme Court.
“Here, the Supreme Court allows the administration to go forward with mass stripping of legal status — that it prevented in its first term — and yet offered no explanation whatsoever, which is particularly egregious given the number of similar cases that are still working their way through the system and are still being adjudicated,” he said.
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The U.S. Supreme Court recently realigned the burden of proof for all employees under Title VII in Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services. Previously, several appellate courts required majority group members (e.
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LGBTQ Nation on MSNSCOTUS’s decision to let parents opt kids out of LGBTQ+ lessons won’t only hurt queer studentsHeterosexism and cissexism are pervasive, and each of us, irrespective of our own identity and expression, stands at risk of their harmful effects.
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Plus, Medicaid and Affordable Care Act cuts in Donald Trump's domestic policy bill have rural hospitals considering what services they might have to cut.
Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson told an interviewer she uses her case opinions to tell people "how I feel about the issues," often writing biting dissents.