US supreme court could transform public life with end-of-term decisions
The Guardian|May 31, 2023
The US supreme court is gearing itself up for the final nail-biting month of its 2022-3 term in which it will deliver decisions that could transform critical areas of public life, from affirmative action in colleges to voting rights, LGBTQ+ equality and the future of Native American tribes.
Ed Pilkington
US supreme court could transform public life with end-of-term decisions

As the court enters the traditional June climax to its judicial year, it is being battered by ethics scandals and plummeting public confidence.

Yet the six rightwing justices who command a supermajority on the nine-seat bench are still expected to push at the limits of constitutional law in the pursuit of their ideological goals. For the first time since the pandemic in 2020 the justices will appear in person to read out the opinions - as well as potentially blistering dissents from the three liberal members.

This time last year, the devastating leak of the draft ruling in Dobbs v Jackson was followed in June by the ruling itself which abolished the right to abortion. The dust from that eruption has barely settled as the country braces once again for a month of seismic judicial interventions.

"I'm surprised that the supreme court is doing so much so quickly - in the past there have been institutionalists at the court who have put the brakes on," said Tara Grove, a law professor at the University of Texas at Austin.

This story is from the May 31, 2023 edition of The Guardian.

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This story is from the May 31, 2023 edition of The Guardian.

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