Supreme Court and Trump’s tariffs
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Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor admitted her conservative colleagues can be "really frustrating" during an appearance on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert."
They’re leaving the circuit courts, the district courts out in limbo,” one judge said during appeals court oral arguments that turned into a venting session about the high court’s terse emergency rulings.
But a handful now may be poised for review by the Supreme Court, or are getting close to it.The cases involve major policies enacted by Mr. Trump in the months since he returned to the White House, and several of them have already been before the high court,
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Disputed charter school funding measure gets a pivotal hearing before the Kentucky Supreme Court
School choice resurfaced Thursday as a hotly debated issue in Kentucky, where the state's highest court heard arguments in a bitter dispute over the constitutionality of a measure to publicly fund charter schools.
Immigration lawyers call the LA decision “disturbing,” say it opens door to racial profiling in Minnesota. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday that immigration agents in Los Angeles could continue to use what opponents call racial and ethnic profiling to decide who to question about their citizenship.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday said it will decide whether President Trump can impose his most sweeping tariffs.
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Brazilian Supreme Court panel sentences Bolsonaro to more than 27 years in prison for coup attempt
A panel of Brazilian Supreme Court justices has sentenced former president Jair Bolsonaro to 27 years and three months in prison after convicting him of attempting a coup to remain in office.
Nick Brown, who has sued the Trump administration 37 times, called the ruling allowing race as a factor in immigration stops a "shameful decision."
The Supreme Court on Wednesday allowed one transgender student to continue using the boys’ bathroom at a South Carolina high school.
A string of recent events — from the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk to President Trump's deployment of troops to U.S. cities — has scholars worried that history is at risk of repeating itself.