Trump administration, SCOTUS and Maryland
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Rodriguez, a Trump appointee, sided with plaintiffs' contention that allowing the law to be used for their deportations would likely cause "immediate and irreparable injury to the removed individuals,...
Yahoo |
The Supreme Court said that the Trump administration is required to "facilitate" the release of a Maryland man who was wrongly deported to an El Salvador prison.
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Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost asked the U.S. Supreme Court to back his blockade against a citizen who has spent two years trying to amend Ohio’s Constitution to limit a legal shield against lawsuits often invoked by police officers.
The Supreme Court tossed out an order blocking the Trump administration from deporting migrants under the Alien Enemies Act. Here's what to know.
PAGING SCOTUS: Trump has been keeping the Supreme Court busy with emergency appeals. Another big one may be coming soon, and it could turbo-charge Trump’s bid to control every square inch of the federal regulatory state.
The Supreme Court is considering a case that could strip millions of Medicaid recipients of their right to choose their health care provider, potentially allowing states to dictate health care
Several key conservatives on the Supreme Court left open the possibility on Wednesday that they could side with Planned Parenthood in a dispute with South Carolina over its decision to yank that organization’s Medicaid funding because it provides ...
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The Supreme Court has three major religious rights cases this spring, which could alter how much freedom religious groups have in tax exemptions and school choice.
Click in for more news from The Hill{beacon} Health Care Health Care The Big Story SCOTUS to hear oral arguments in abortion-related caseThe Supreme Court will hear oral arguments
The Supreme Court issued an order Friday allowing the Trump administration to move forward with cancellation of federal funding for teacher training initiatives.
April 5 (UPI) --The Supreme Court on Friday granted the Trump administration's request to halt a lower court's temporary restraining order requiring the federal government to continue $600 million ...
BREAKING: The Supreme Court on Wednesday handed a win to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) over its refusal to approve flavored e-cigarettes. The court threw out an appeals court ruling that found the agency unlawfully changed the rules in the middle of proceedings when it was deciding whether to approve various products.
The Supreme Court's ruling applies to 16,000 recently reinstated feds, but some of those are still protected by another court decision.