Trump, Supreme Court and deportations
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The justices are considering whether to limit the authority of federal judges to issue nationwide injunctions that have blocked key parts of the Trump agenda until they can be heard in court.
The Supreme Court is turning to the final weeks of a busy term that started off with blockbuster appeals over transgender rights and TikTok but that has increasingly become wrapped up in the policies and politics of President Donald Trump.
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.
A majority of the Supreme Court appeared ready Thursday to place some limits on the power of single federal district judges to freeze presidential actions nationwide, in oral arguments over the future of President Donald Trump’s effort to end birthright citizenship.
12don MSN
The Supreme Court on Thursday seemed open to lifting a series of nationwide orders blocking President Donald Trump from enforcing his birthright citizenship policy even as several of the justices wrestled with the practical implications of allowing the government to deny citizenship to people born in the US.
The Supreme Court showed uncertainty over how to limit nationwide injunctions in a case stemming from blocks to President Donald Trump's birthright citizenship order.
Sen. John Kennedy led other supporters of the JCRA in speaking with Fox News Digital on the matter of nationwide injunctions and the SCOTUS case.
What do questions from the key justices in the case tell us about where the Supreme Court might be headed on nationwide injunctions?