On today’s What Next: This Supreme Court revealed itself to be unpopular, unaccountable, and increasingly unabashed.
Unpopular decisions and multiple scandals involving lavish, undisclosed gifts from conservative megadonors have the Supreme Court handing down decisions under a cloud of public outcry and controversy—but that hasn’t stopped the conservative majority from acting just as hardline as its critics feared.
If you enjoy this show, please consider signing up for Slate Plus. Slate Plus members get benefits like zero ads on any Slate podcast, bonus episodes of shows like Slow Burn and Dear Prudence—and you’ll be supporting the work we do here on What Next. Sign up now atPodcast production by Elena Schwartz, Madeline Ducharme, Anna Phillips, Paige Osburn, and Rob Gunther, with help from Jared Downing and Laura Spencer.
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Supreme Court term takes hard right turn in student loan, affirmative action casesThe Supreme Court's final rulings will leave it positioned as a lightning rod despite other outcomes in which the justices found common ground.
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Analysis | Supreme Court delivered big conservative wins, and a mixed messageAnalysis: A trio of ideologically divided, 6-3 decisions showed the abiding dominance of the court’s conservative supermajority. But they were among only a handful of decisions — five, as opposed to 14 last term — in which those ideological lines held.
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Clarence Page: Supreme Court pointed to affirmative action optionsThe Supreme Court scrapped race as a factor in affirmative action college admissions, but the Roberts court pointed the way to economic class as a better remedy.
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The Supreme Court of Public Relations ReturnsWhy the court’s newest conservatives retreated, a little, to the chief justice’s security umbrella.
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Jen Psaki: The landmine hidden in John Roberts' election decisionIt was a surprisingly good ruling from the majority of Supreme Court justices, writes jrpsaki. But it may leave room for a lot of judicial mischief leading up to 2024.
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