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  2. Why SCOTUS Term Limits Will Lead to a Fairer Court - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-scotus-term-limits-lead...

    The legal elite from whose ranks Supreme Court Justices were drawn had a relatively homogenous worldview, and so Republican appointees like Earl Warren and William Brennan ended up more liberal ...

  3. 2024 term opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_term_opinions_of_the...

    Agreement percentages are based only on the listed cases in which a justice participated and are rounded to the nearest one-tenth of one percentage point. Individual opinion counts may not match the Supreme Court's totals due to cases where justices jointly author opinions, which is counted separately here, but only once in the Supreme Court's ...

  4. Should the Supreme Court be expanded? Calls to pack the ... - AOL

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s term came to an end last month as the conservative majority released a slew of opinions that sparked widespread controversy and renewed the debate around court packing ...

  5. Here's the argument Trump hopes will net first major SCOTUS ...

    www.aol.com/heres-argument-trump-hopes-net...

    The Trump administration is arguing that courts are attempting "to seize executive power" as the president seeks to fire federal employees, an argument the court will likely side with, experts say.

  6. 2023 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_term_per_curiam...

    The Supreme Court of the United States handed down five per curiam opinions during its 2023 term, which began October 2, 2023, and concluded on October 6, 2024. Because per curiam decisions are issued from the Court as an institution, these opinions all lack the attribution of authorship or joining votes to specific justices. All justices on ...

  7. Ordered liberty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordered_liberty

    Connecticut, 302 U.S. 319 (1937), wherein the Supreme Court held that the Due Process Clause protected only those rights that were "of the very essence of a scheme of ordered liberty" and that the court should therefore incorporate the Bill of Rights onto the states gradually, as justiciable violations arose, based on whether the infringed ...

  8. Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Students_for_Fair...

    Harvard filed an opposing brief seeking to have the Supreme Court reject SFFA's petition. [48] [49] In June 2021, the Court requested that the U.S. government submit a brief of its stance on the case, [50] and in December the Solicitor General of the United States under the Biden administration urged the Supreme Court to reject the appeal. [51]

  9. Judges are pausing Trump's policy changes. But for how long?

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    The stunning number of executive orders and other actions taken by Trump in his first weeks in office have generated more than thirty lawsuits. And the first wave to hit the courts haven’t gone ...