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'Especially vocal' Supreme Court Justice alienated from her colleagues: expert

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson has been “especially vocal” against President Donald Trump’s agenda, and CNN Chief Supreme Court Analyst Joan Biskupic believes it's alienated her from her colleagues on the high court.

The remarks came ahead of the final days of the Supreme Court’s term, according to CNN This Morning anchor Audie Cornish.

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'Nothing to see here': Legal experts outraged by Supreme Court's new ruling

The Supreme Court ruled against transgender youth on Wednesday by upholding a ban that the Tennessee legislature passed into law.

Legal analysts were deeply disturbed by the justification using the Equal Protection Clause to decide United States v. Skrmetti on Wednesday.

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'We'll see': Hegseth suggests he could disobey Supreme Court on troops in cities

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth suggested to Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-HI) that he might ignore an order from the U.S. Supreme Court requiring him to withdraw troops from U.S. cities.

During a Wednesday hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Hirono noted that Hegseth had a "tough start" in his position.

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'Forcefully disagrees': Liberal justice breaks Supreme Court protocol in dissent

Supreme Court Justice Sonya Sotomayor was so upset with the majority conservative decision upholding a Tennessee ban on gender-affirming care for minors, that she broke a longstanding protocol when writing her dissent.

The court voted 6-3 Wednesday. Sotomayor wrote the dissent for the liberal justices.

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'We've been watching this case': Supreme Court issues ruling in reverse bias row

The U.S. Supreme Court sided with a straight woman who filed a “reverse discrimination” lawsuit against her employer after her gay boss passed over her for a promotion that went to a gay colleague.

The unanimous decision issued Thursday would make it easier to file such challenges in some parts of the country, and CNN's Paula Reid explained the implications of the case as president Donald Trump has made it a priority to roll back diversity, equity and inclusion programs.

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'I'm the movement': Reporter exposes Trump's reasons for feud with GOP mainstay

President Donald Trump has been privately fuming about the U.S. Supreme Court justices he nominated and publicly feuding with the conservative mainstay that recommended them, and a veteran reporter explained why the rift has developed.

The president has been griping for at least a year about justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and, especially, Amy Coney Barrett, according to multiple sources, and his anger has been fueled by right-wing allies like Laura Loomer, who have been telling Trump they're not in line with the MAGA movement, and NOTUS reporter Evan McMorris-Santoro told "CNN This Morning" what's fueling this dynamic.

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'Patently insufficient': Justice Jackson hammers 'botched' pro-Trump ruling

In a dissent included in an unsigned order released by the Supreme Court on Friday, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson scolded her colleagues for not giving enough serious consideration to all parties involved in an emergency appeal from Donald Trump's Department of Justice.

As the New York Times reported, the majority ruled in favor of the president by revoking a policy put in place under former President Joe Biden that is allowing more than 500,000 immigrants to stay in the U.S. temporarily on humanitarian grounds.

The ruling means immigrants from Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti now face the threat of being swiftly deported while their individual cases are still under review in the U.S.

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The court wrote an "order entered by the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts ... is stayed pending the disposition of the appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and disposition of a petition for a writ of certiorari, if such a writ is timely sought. Should certiorari be denied, this stay shall terminate automatically."

That earned a scathing response from Justice Brown Jackson that the majority had screwed up.

"The Court has plainly botched this assessment today," she wrote. "It requires next to nothing from the Government with respect to irreparable harm. And it undervalues the devastating consequences of allowing the Government to precipitously upend the lives and livelihoods of nearly half a million noncitizens while their legal claims are pending."

She advised, "Even if the Government is likely to win on the merits, in our legal system, success takes time and the stay standards require more than anticipated victory. I would have denied the Government’s application because its harm-related showing is patently insufficient. The balance of the equities also weighs heavily in respondents’ favor."

"While it is apparent that the Government seeks a stay to enable it to inflict maximum predecision damage, court-ordered stays exist to minimize — not maximize — harm to litigating parties," she asserted.

You can read the filing here.

Legal expert shows how GOP Supreme Court justices are like a 'Mean Girls' clique

University of Michigan Law School Professor Leah Litman spoke to Mehdi Hasan on Thursday about her new book, which details the way that conservatives on the Supreme Court have "embraced" "unabashed lawlessness."

The book, Lawless: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, and Bad Vibes, uses a lot of pop culture references to make complex legal matters more straightforward for non-lawyers.

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Analysis exposes dark message sent by Supreme Court’s 'radical' judicial actions

The U.S. Supreme Court “has undermined lower courts” and “effectively allowed the president to neutralize some of the last remaining sites of independent expertise and authority inside the executive branch,” University of Pennsylvania law professor Kate Shaw warns. And doing so could have a catastrophic impact of the rule of law in the country.

Shaw, writing for the New York Times, discussed a recent decision by the Supreme Court to “stay” rulings from the U.S. District Courts and the full D.C. Circuit. That ruling permitted President Donald Trump to fire high-level officials — a move previously considered “unlawful under existing precedent.”

Shaw in her essay argues against the “unitary executive theory” and its proponents’ “singular fixation on the president’s power to fire — a power the Constitution doesn’t expressly give the president.”

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“Even if you disagree — even if you think that Article II’s grant of ‘the executive power’ to the president includes the power to fire at will any high-level official in the executive branch — the court’s disposition of the case sends a profoundly dangerous message to the White House,” Shaw warns. “…Handing the president a win here suggests that the administration did not need to abide by Congress’s statutes or the Supreme Court’s rulings as it sought to change legal understandings.”

“This decision risks emboldening the administration further to act outside of our traditional constitutional order,” she adds.

Shaw writes:

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Supreme Court 'directly communicated' profane response to Stephen Miller: lawyer

Donald Trump's White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller got a "direct" message from seven of nine Supreme Court justices, a former federal prosecutor said Saturday.

Ex-prosecutor Glenn Kirschner over the weekend published a video entitled, "The Supreme Court AGAIN Tells Trump NO UNCONSTITUTIONAL DEPORTATIONS Of Venezuelan Immigrants," in which the legal analyst highlighted a pattern in which at least seven Supreme Court justices have been standing up to the president.

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​'Prepared to strike': Ex-prosecutor says the Supreme Court set a trap for Trump

The Supreme Court might just be giving Donald Trump enough rope to hang himself in a court of law, an ex-prosecutor said on Saturday.

Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance over the weekend weighed in on the Supreme Court's recent hearing in a case involving a controversial law used to deport immigrants without due process.

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'Unhinged': Spy chief alerted as Trump seen 'threatening Supreme Court justices'

"Trump is now threatening Supreme Court justices who ruled against him," Democratic influencer Harry Sisson said on Saturday.

That is just one of the notable people who over the weekend accused the president of lobbing indirect threats at the members of the mostly conservative Supreme Court, many of whom Trump himself appointed.

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Trump shares ally's plan to 'release terrorists near homes of Supreme Court justices'

Donald Trump has been lashing out at the Supreme Court since it handed him a loss on the issue of immigration, and on Saturday he went as far as to distribute a MAGA lawyer's plan to "release 'terrorists' near the homes of Supreme Court justices."

Former GOP staffer Mike Davis has made headlines for his social media comments in the past, and was rumored to be on Trump's list for attorney general. Recently, he posted a plan to get back at the Supreme Court justices for not ruling in line with MAGA.

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