Trump, Supreme Court and Judges
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A federal judge has temporarily blocked President Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship. The ruling is in response to a lawsuit aimed at getting around a recent Supreme Court ruling limiting nationwide injunctions.
A review of the US Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. CASA, Inc., which held that federal district courts’ universal preliminary injunctions that enjoin government officials from implementing and enforcing an executive order likely exceed the courts’ equitable authority granted by Congress under the Judiciary Act of 1789.
The high court's order blocks a May decision by a California court that temporarily blocked the efforts of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to drastically reduce the size of his agency's workforce.
A judge has blocked President Donald Trump's order restricting birthright citizenship from taking effect anywhere in the United States.
A Supreme Court opinion limiting the use of nationwide injunctions takes aim at a judicial maneuver that has soared in popularity during the first several months of Trump’s second term.
10 Ways to Think About the Supreme Court’s Ruling on Nationwide Injunctions What experts and pundits are saying about the monumental decision. By Chas Danner , staff editor at Intelligencer
However, the Supreme Court’s oral arguments did not evaluate Trump’s birthright citizenship case on the merits. Instead, the question central to this debate concerned universal injunctions.
The Supreme Court heard arguments about injunctions against Trump’s order to end birthright citizenship for those born to parents of undocumented immigrants or foreign visitors.
Washington — The Supreme Court spent much of its most recent term responding to a fire hose of requests for emergency relief sought by the Trump administration, as President Trump's efforts to implement key aspects of his second-term agenda were stymied by lower courts on several fronts.