There was a surge in executions in 2025. Here’s how the Supreme Court responded.
The Black Codes must not define America’s fundamental freedoms
SCOTUStoday for Wednesday, February 4
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Why equal protection can’t be settled by biology and statistics
Please note that SCOTUS Outside Opinions constitute the views of outside contributors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of SCOTUSblog or its staff.
Last month, the Supreme Court held oral argument on two landmark anti-discrimination cases: Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J. The states in these cases – Idaho and West Virginia – passed laws categorically banning trans girls from playing on girls’ sports teams. Two trans girls who underwent gender-affirming medical treatments while young challenged the laws as a violation of the equal protection clause and Title IX, which prohibits discrimination “on the basis of sex” in “any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.”
Continue ReadingCan traditionalism be originalist?
Please note that SCOTUS Outside Opinions constitute the views of outside contributors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of SCOTUSblog or its staff.
Tradition may have been a balancing force in “Fiddler on the Roof” but nowadays it has originalists feeling out of whack. Originalists unite around the belief that constitutional provisions should be interpreted according to their original public meaning; that is, how these provisions would have been understood at the time of their ratification. But what counts as evidence of original public meaning? And can post-ratification practices play a role?
Continue ReadingCalifornia urges court to permit it to use congressional map enacted to counter Republican gains in Texas
Lawyers for the state of California on Thursday urged the Supreme Court to leave in place a new congressional map intended to give Democrats five additional seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. Christopher Hu, the deputy solicitor general of California, called the desire by Republicans to retain a majority in the House a “natural political objective.” But it is “deeply unnatural,” the state contended, for a group of California Republicans challenging the map to ask the justices “to step into the political fray, granting one political party a sizeable advantage by enjoining California’s partisan gerrymander after having allowed” Texas to implement a map intended to allow Republicans to pick up five additional seats in that state.
Continue ReadingWhen will we get the tariffs ruling?
On Nov. 5, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in the challenges to President Donald Trump’s authority to impose broad tariffs through a series of executive orders that he issued in 2025. As is often the case with high-profile cases, there is enormous interest in how the court will rule. But with U.S. importers paying billions of dollars each month in tariffs, another pressing question for many is when the court will issue its decision.
Continue ReadingJustices to consider whether to weigh in on $5 million verdict against Trump at next conference
When the justices hold their private conference on Friday, Feb. 20, the petitions for review that they are slated to consider will include one from President Donald Trump, asking the Supreme Court to weigh in on the 2023 verdict against him in a civil suit brought by E. Jean Carroll. Trump calls the lawsuit “facially implausible” and “politically motivated”; Carroll urges the court to deny Trump’s petition, telling the justices that the verdict would stand regardless of their ruling.
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