Supreme Court grants DOGE staff access to SSA data
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The Supreme Court on Friday evening released orders from the justices’ private conference on Thursday. The justices added four new cases, involving issues such as federal sentencing, the death penalty,
The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Friday to hear a challenge to the legality of a restriction imposed by Washington, D.C., on large-capacity ammunition magazines in a case that gives the justices a chance to further expand gun rights.
Yesterday, Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping spoke on the phone for over an hour in a bid to jumpstart stalled trade talks between the two economic powers. The two sides had agreed to a truce in May after similar high-level negotiations in Geneva, each country agreeing to significantly lower high tariffs on the other's goods.
While the justices have released decisions in cases regarding the federal TikTok sell or ban law and rules tightening restrictions on so-called “ghost guns” earlier in the term, many of the top cases are still awaiting their fate or have been decided in the closing weeks of the term, which concludes at the end of June.
Donald Trump's administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday to permit it to proceed with dismantling the Department of Education, a move that would leave school policy in the United States almost entirely in the hands of states and local boards.
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New York Magazine on MSNThe Supreme Court Will Settle Trump’s Tariffs. But When? And How?Once again, Trump’s aggressive, scattershot use of executive power has pushed us into new constitutional territory.
The Supreme Court on Thursday sent the case of an Ohio woman who contends that she was the victim of reverse discrimination back to the lower courts. In a unanimous ruling […]
In a unanimous blow to gun control advocacy groups, the Supreme Court shut down Mexicos $10 billion claim targeting U.S. gun makers in a
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court on June 5rejected Mexico’s attempt to hold U.S. gunmakers liable for violence and atrocities Mexican drug cartels have inflicted usingtheir weapons. The court unanimously ruled that firearms makers are protected by a federal law barring certain lawsuits against them.
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The Supreme Court is tossing out a $10 billion lawsuit Mexico filed against top U.S. firearm manufacturers alleging the companies fuel cartel gun violence.
The Supreme Court on Friday mistakenly sent out email alerts to attorneys and others laying out which cases it would hear days before it was scheduled to do so, the latest major technical glitch to come from the high court during its busiest month of the year.