Supreme Court set to issue final rulings on birthright citizenship, LGBT books, porn sites, and other cases
With that in mind, plus the fact that we don’t know the order in which they’ll come out, the rulings expected Friday morning (starting at 10 a.m. ET) are:
Birthright citizenship (sort of). Technically, the overall legality of President Donald Trump’s attempt to curb the constitutional guarantee of automatic citizenship for people born on U.S. soil isn’t at issue. Rather, the focus is on a procedural aspect of the litigation, specifically whether trial court judges were allowed to grant nationwide injunctions against Trump’s unconstitutional order, as opposed to more limited rulings. But the injunction issue is important in its own right and extends beyond the citizenship question, and whatever the justices say about injunctions will affect the underlying citizenship litigation too.
Religion vs. LGBTQ books in public schools. Some Maryland parents want to keep their elementary school-age kids away from LGBTQ-themed books. While the parents say they face an “impossible choice” between subjecting their children to instruction against their beliefs or losing out on public education, school officials say the parents aren’t deprived of religious rights just because their kids are exposed to material the parents find offensive.
Porn and the First Amendment. An adult industry trade group challenged a Texas law requiring age verification to access pornographic sites. The industry argued that an appeals court used the wrong legal standard when ruling against it. The impending ruling could have vast First Amendment implications beyond pornography.
Louisiana redistricting. As NBC News reported, this “unusual case” put civil rights groups “in a tentative alliance with Republican officials in defending a Louisiana congressional map that includes two majority Black districts for the first time in decades.”
Health care and the Constitution. The justices are considering whether a federal health task force is constitutionally structured, in a case involving its recommendation of coverage for HIV prevention medication at no cost to patients under the Affordable Care Act.
Phone and internet subsidy. This appeal over the government’s provision of affordable phone and internet services to schools, libraries and underserved areas raises a legal issue known as “nondelegation,” which looks at whether Congress properly outsourced its power, in this case to the Federal Communications Commission and a private nonprofit.
Offsite Linkby Anonymous | reply 19 | June 27, 2025 10:44 PM
|
It's pretty clear how this is all going to go down: an end-run around depriving birthright citizenship; no corrective expansion of voter representation for non-whites; religious dictates trumping teachers and parents secular wishes; "Obamacare" dismantled incrementally; yes, to monitoring people's consumption of online content (porn is the "gateway" to this).
It's what those 6 reactionaries were installed to do.
by Anonymous | reply 1 | June 26, 2025 11:48 PM
|
SCOTUS upholds the ACA provision requiring full coverage or preventative treatment, 6-3 vote.
by Anonymous | reply 3 | June 27, 2025 2:43 PM
|
One good decision. Upholding (6-3) the Universal Service Fund, which provides phone and internet access to poor and rural areas.
by Anonymous | reply 4 | June 27, 2025 2:43 PM
|
Parents who object to LGBT books in the classroom have a 1st Amendment right to "opt out" their children from seeing those books. 6-3 and Alito, of course, writes the majority opinion.
by Anonymous | reply 5 | June 27, 2025 2:54 PM
|
Ugh, upholds (6-3) age-verification laws for online porn. Kagan accuses the majority of diluting 1st Amendment protections for sexually explicit speech.
by Anonymous | reply 6 | June 27, 2025 3:20 PM
|
DEMOCRACY OFFICIALLY OVER TODAY.
by Anonymous | reply 7 | June 27, 2025 3:23 PM
|
The orange turd will speak soon and gloat over his destruction of our democracy.
by Anonymous | reply 8 | June 27, 2025 3:42 PM
|
VPN services are going to see an increase in business.
by Anonymous | reply 9 | June 27, 2025 4:10 PM
|
[quote] DEMOCRACY OFFICIALLY OVER TODAY.
MARY!
by Anonymous | reply 10 | June 27, 2025 4:23 PM
|
We never were a democracy.
by Anonymous | reply 11 | June 27, 2025 4:32 PM
|
No one seems to care that our democracy is down the terlet. When they come for us on DL it’s too late. ‘’You have family in the old country?”
by Anonymous | reply 14 | June 27, 2025 7:15 PM
|
"I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands..."
Thus, we are not a Democracy.
by Anonymous | reply 15 | June 27, 2025 7:19 PM
|
You’ve written it incorrectly- it’s ‘’ and to the republic for Richard Stance…’’ please do better.
by Anonymous | reply 16 | June 27, 2025 9:22 PM
|
It’s all over but the shoutin.
by Anonymous | reply 17 | June 27, 2025 9:25 PM
|
"I pledge allegiance to President Trump, and the Kakistocracy for which he squats. One White, Christian nation under President Trump, with liberty and justice for the highest bidders only."
by Anonymous | reply 18 | June 27, 2025 9:49 PM
|
Represented by two red flags with black squares in the center.
by Anonymous | reply 19 | June 27, 2025 10:44 PM
|