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NPR reports – and quickly retracts – GOP Supreme Court justice's retirement

A veteran Supreme Court correspondent apparently jumped the gun with a report that Justice Samuel Alito is retiring.

NPR's Nina Totenberg reported Tuesday, just after the current term's last opinions were handed down, that the 76-year-old George W. Bush appointee was stepping down, but the network quickly retracted the breaking news article.

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'Vile man': Justice Clarence Thomas bashed for 'ugliest' remarks in major new ruling

Conservative Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was taken to task on Tuesday over his non-legalistic claims in a ruling that allows states to bar transgender female athletes from participating on girls’ and women’s sports teams.

In the 6-3 decision for the conservative majority Justice Brett Kavanaugh took the lead and wrote that schools "may determine eligibility for women's and girls' sports based on biological sex."

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Justice Sotomayor smacks Kavanaugh with stinging dissent in campaign spending case

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor smacked her conservative colleagues with a stinging rebuke for their decision to gut another campaign finance statute by overturning a decades-old precedent.

The court struck down federal limits on how much money a political committee can spend in coordination with candidates in the case National Republican Senatorial Committee v. Federal Election Commission, and Sotomayor ripped the 6-3 conservative majority, questioned their legal reasoning and accused them of flaunting their own power.

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Trump's biggest 'win' could be his party's worst nightmare: analyst

President Donald Trump was dealt a major blow when the Supreme Court ruled to uphold mail-in voting, but the "win" Trump saw with the high court's decision in Trump v. Slaughter might come back to haunt him and the GOP, an analyst reported on Tuesday.

In Slaughter, the Supreme Court ruled that the president has the power to fire members of formerly independent agencies like the Federal Trade Commission, The Bulwark's White House correspondent Andrew Egger explained.

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Five sharpest barbs in new Supreme Court ruling as the justices turn on each other

The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on Tuesday that states can bar transgender girls from female school sports, upholding laws in West Virginia and Idaho — and the justices spent much of the opinion going at one another.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote the majority opinion, holding that neither Title IX nor the Constitution's Equal Protection Clause stops states from limiting girls' teams to students who are female at birth. The decision reversed lower-court wins for Becky Pepper-Jackson, the 15-year-old West Virginia student at the center of the case, and Boise State athlete Lindsay Hecox, whose cases the justices heard in January. Justice Sonia Sotomayor agreed the Title IX claim failed but dissented on the rest, joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

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MAGA melts down as Supreme Court strikes down Trump's big order: 'Blow to the future'

MAGA loyalists were furious on Tuesday after the Supreme Court reaffirmed birthright citizenship, signaling a major loss for President Donald Trump's agenda.

Trump lost in his attempt to deny automatic citizenship to those born to undocumented migrants, and justices ruled to maintain a 150-year-old court precedent.

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Supreme Court deals devastating blow to Trump in major citizenship rights case

The Supreme Court dealt a devastating blow to President Donald Trump’s agenda Tuesday after ruling 5-4 against his efforts to eliminate birthright citizenship, a constitutional right long targeted by far-right figures.

“Citizenship, then and now, was the right to have rights — to freely participate in our political community," wrote Justice John Roberts for the court's majority opinion. "We keep that promise today."

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Ex-GOP strategist flags hidden message buried in Trump's 'grotesque' White House addition

President Donald Trump shared what appeared to be an AI-generated image Monday night of a golden eagle statue affixed to the White House facade, and while the post was ridiculed by critics, one former GOP staffer flagged what they believed was a hidden message.

The image in question shows a golden eagle statue attached to the front facade of the White House holding a red, white and gold shield surrounded by 11 stars. Trump described it as a “golden gift to the White House for its 250th birthday year,” suggesting there may be plans to bring the image to life.

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'No sign yet!' Missing GOP lawmaker draws crowd expecting first public remarks in months

A crowd of reporters gathered outside the Capitol Hill office of Rep. Tom Kean Jr. (R-NJ) Tuesday morning, but the long-missing congressman has not yet shown.

Kean last voted in the House on March 5. He has missed more than 140 votes since then.

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RFK Jr. inadvertently makes astonishing admission about pro wrestling

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. appeared on Newsnation Tuesday to tout the return of the Presidential Fitness Test to public schools, but during the interview, made an off-handed comment that carried a startling suggestion.

“One of the criticisms of the Presidential Fitness Test back in the 2010s before it was nixed was that it wasn’t great for kids’ self-esteem, that it was hard for the kids who weren’t physically inclined,” said Newsnation’s Anna Kooiman.

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Trump accuser's case is becoming Todd Blanche's confirmation nightmare: report

A legal battle over one Jeffrey Epstein accuser's unreleased FBI interview notes has emerged as a flashpoint threatening to complicate acting Attorney General Todd Blanche's path to confirmation, as a federal judge presses the Justice Department for answers it has so far declined to give.

The woman, known in court filings as Jane Doe 4, alleged in four 2019 FBI interviews that she was abused by Epstein in the 1980s and separately assaulted by Donald Trump when she was between 13 and 15 years old, and a federal judge has asked the Justice Department for answers about her case that have so far not been provided, reported The Guardian.

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Judge reverses ban on Trump's most-hated phrase in pro-impeachment protests

A federal judge ruled Monday that a pro-impeachment protest group can keep flying a flag with a phrase President Donald Trump has called a death threat against him.

The group Accountability NOW USA has displayed a flag reading "8647" as part of a months-long demonstration outside a federal courthouse demanding Trump's impeachment.

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Complicit Rubio could be 'more dangerous than Trump': conservative

As Secretary of State Marco Rubio assumes a commanding position as the presumed successor to Donald Trump’s MAGA throne, one of the former Florida senator’s supporters wondered this week if he is damaged goods.

Writing for NOTUS, longtime conservative columnist Matt Lewis noted that he supported Rubio in 2016 and his esteem for him has only grown, but now he worries that not only has he been “complicit,” which could damage his future or worse, or could he have learned the wrong lessons from the Trump administration.

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