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ARGUMENT ANALYSIS

Court seems sympathetic to death-row inmate’s attempt to challenge racial discrimination in jury selection

By Amy Howe on April 2, 2026

The Supreme Court on Tuesday seemed sympathetic to a Mississippi man who argues that a district attorney violated the Constitution’s ban on racial discrimination in jury selection. Terry Pitchford is on death row for his role in the 2004 robbery and murder of Reuben Britt, who owned a store in Grenada County, Mississippi. At his trial, prosecutor Doug Evans eliminated four potential jurors, all of whom were Black, over the objections of Pitchford’s lawyers.

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SUPREME COURTS AROUND THE WORLD

The Supreme Court of India

By Zachary Shemtob on April 2, 2026

Welcome to SCOTUSblog’s recurring series in which we interview experts on different supreme courts around the world and how they compare to our own. In our previous columns, we focused on the UK Supreme Court and the Supreme Court of Canada. Today’s column focuses on one of the most fascinating high courts in the world: that of India. To help dispel my profound ignorance of this institution (unusual headlines aside), I corresponded with Professor Rohit De.   

Rohit De is an associate professor of history at Yale University. He is the author of the 2018 book A People’s Constitution: The Everyday Life of Law in the Indian Republic, and, with Ornit Shani, the 2025 book Assembling India’s Constitution: A New Democratic History. He has a PhD in history from Princeton University, and law degrees from Yale Law School and the National Law School of India.

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EMPIRICAL SCOTUS

Who is driving the conversation at the Supreme Court?

By Adam Feldman on April 2, 2026

Empirical SCOTUS is a recurring series by Adam Feldman that looks at Supreme Court data, primarily in the form of opinions and oral arguments, to provide insights into the justices’ decision making and what we can expect from the court in the future.

This term, the Supreme Court’s oral argument docket has had a distinctly public-facing quality. Many of the biggest arguments have involved disputes that reach well beyond the parties and into the country’s political life: redistricting in Louisiana v. Callais, presidential tariff authority in Learning Resources v. Trump, presidential removal power and the Federal Reserve in Trump v. Cook, and birthright citizenship in Trump v. Barbara, which was argued on April 1. Even by the standards of the modern Roberts court, that is a striking concentration of cases touching elections, executive power, and the very architecture of government. That docket has naturally drawn attention to outcomes. But it also offers a useful chance to look at something more granular: the nature of oral argument itself. Which advocates are carrying the heaviest load? Which justices are speaking most often? Which cases become justice-dominated exchanges, and which leave more room for uninterrupted advocacy? And what does that tell us about how the law itself is being shaped?

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Argument Analysis

Supreme Court appears likely to side against Trump on birthright citizenship

By Amy Howe on April 1, 2026

Updated on April 1 at 10:10 p.m.

On Jan. 20, 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order that would end birthright citizenship – the guarantee of U.S. citizenship to virtually everyone born in this country. Trump’s order has never gone into effect; since then, every federal court that has considered a challenge to the order has struck it down. After just over two hours of oral arguments on Wednesday, before an audience that included (at least for part of the morning) Trump himself, a majority of the Supreme Court seemed likely to do the same.

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