Chief U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Roberts on Monday at the request of Republican officials in 19 states temporarily blocked the Biden administration from later this week ending a pandemic-era policy of rapidly expelling migrants caught at the U.S.-Mexico border.
The Republican officials led by the attorneys general in Arizona and Louisiana on Monday asked the Supreme Court to act after a federal appeals court on
Friday declined to put on hold a judge's ruling last month that invalidated an emergency order known as Title 42. The policy is set to expire Wednesday.Our Standards:
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Chief Justice Roberts pauses lifting of Title 42, keeping migrant policy in place for nowTitle 42 has been used to expel migrants more than 2.4 million times since 2020. GOP-led states want to require the Biden administration to continue.
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North Carolina Supreme Court strikes down voter ID requirement over racial bias concernsThe state’s high court made a 4-3 decision on Friday to side with a lower court ruling that voided the photo ID law due to the violation of an equal protection clause of the North Carolina Constitution.
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Gay couples in India ask Supreme Court to legalise same-sex marriageFour gay couples have asked India's Supreme Court to recognise same-sex marriages, setting the stage for a legal face-off with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government which has in the past refused to legalise such marriages.
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Justice Gorsuch’s white whale: Supreme Court has new chance to consider agencies’ powerSupreme Court Justice Neil M. Gorsuch was expected to be conservatives’ barbarian at the gates of big government, leading a charge to tear down the 1984 case they pinpoint as a legal justification for expansion of the regulatory state.
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An 'Imperial Supreme Court' Asserts Its Power, Alarming ScholarsWASHINGTON — The conventional critique of the Supreme Court these days is that it has lurched to the right and is out of step with the public on many issues. That is true so far as it goes. But a burst of recent legal scholarship makes a deeper point, saying the current court is distinctive in a different way: It has rapidly been accumulating power at the expense of every other part of the government. Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times The phenomenon was documented last m
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Supreme Court will hear Section 230 challenges in FebruaryPossibly the first of many.
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