It’s going to be a busy week for the Supreme Court this week.
The US Supreme Court will makes several key decisions and rulings in the upcoming week before the court heads to Summer break.
On Tuesday, it’s expected the Supreme Court will release rulings on Biden’s student debt relief, affirmative action and federal election laws.
The Court is also set to make a decision on 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis which is a case involving a web designer in Colorado who is challenging Colorado’s law that demands she create same-sex wedding websites.
Next week! It has been a long week!
Let’s see the sunset of racial preferences in college admissions!
Supreme Court set for furious round of decisions in final days of June https://t.co/QJzn0hGWjD
— Tony Guan (@ECalifornians) June 26, 2023
The Supreme Court will release more decisions on Tuesday. We'll be watching closely to see the fate of Biden's unconstitutional student loan bailout pic.twitter.com/NLr630kcLy
— Landmark Legal (@LandmarkLegal) June 23, 2023
Here’s what Yahoo News reported:
The Supreme Court is set to hand down key decisions this week on student debt relief, affirmative action and federal election laws as it enters the last week of its summer session with 10 cases pending.
ADVERTISEMENTThe court has given no indication it will break its norm of finishing decisions by the end of June, and the next batch is slated to be released Tuesday morning.
Beyond the decisions, the court is also forming its docket for the next term. The justices on Monday could announce whether they will take up several high-profile cases, including on guns, racial discrimination and qualified immunity.
The Supreme Court’s biggest decisions are coming. Here’s what they could say. https://t.co/ok9N4V9Fkc
— WFXR News (@WFXRnews) June 26, 2023
The Huron Daily Tribune added these details regarding the Supreme Court’s upcoming deciosn on an election case in North Carolina:
As election season accelerates, the Supreme Court has still not said what it will do in a case about the power of state legislatures to make rules for congressional and presidential elections without being checked by state courts.
In a case out of North Carolina the justices were asked to essentially eliminate the power of state courts to strike down congressional districts drawn by legislatures on the grounds that they violate state constitutions.
But there’s a wrinkle. Since the justices heard arguments in the case in December, North Carolina’s state Supreme Court threw out the ruling the Supreme Court was reviewing after Republicans claimed control of that court. That could give the justices an out and let them dismiss the case without reaching a decision.
The high court could still take up a similar case from Ohio and reach a decision there, but it wouldn’t be until after the 2024 elections.
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