The U.S. Supreme Court has been actively reviewing several key cases involving policies enacted by the Trump administration, with rulings expected by the end of June.
Key Takeaways
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled on several key cases involving Trump administration policies. A federal judge also restored immigration status for nearly 900,000 migrants who entered through the CBP One app.
- Federal judge rules DHS illegally revoked parole of migrants
- Supreme Court strikes down Trump's tariffs and questions birthright citizenship policy
- Justices signal skepticism toward Trump's firing of Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook
- Court appears likely to uphold state laws banning transgender athletes from female sports teams
According to multiple reports, the court struck down Trump's sweeping tariffs on February 20 in a ruling that could have significant implications for the global economy. The justices ruled that the law under which Trump imposed the tariffs did not grant him the authority to do so. Additionally, on April 1, the court signaled skepticism toward Trump's directive to restrict birthright citizenship, with justices grilling the administration's lawyer about its legal validity and practical implications.
A federal judge in Boston ruled that the Trump administration violated the law when it ended the immigration status of nearly 900,000 migrants who came to the U.S. through a Biden-era parole program called CBP One. The ruling reinstates the immigration status of those who entered via CBP One and whose status was terminated.
The court's conservative justices also signaled their willingness to undercut another key section of the Voting Rights Act during arguments on October 15 in a major case involving Louisiana electoral districts. Furthermore, the court appears poised to side with the operator of Christian faith-based anti-abortion 'crisis pregnancy centers' in New Jersey in a dispute stemming from an investigation into whether these facilities engage in deceptive practices.
The Supreme Court has been dealing with a series of cases involving challenges to the actions of President Donald Trump and his administration since he returned to office in January 2025. These cases have involved tariffs, birthright citizenship, the U.S. Federal Reserve, immigration policy, domestic troop deployment, transgender rights, firings of federal workers and agency officials, dismantling the Education Department, cuts to teacher training and medical research grants, foreign aid and other matters.
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