Justices rule on birthright citizenship, health care in 6 major decisions


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Summary

Final day

The Supreme Court is expected to release its final opinions of the term Friday, June 27, during a public, non-argument session. Six major cases remain unresolved.

Pending rulings

Cases involve racial gerrymandering, preventive health care, LGBTQ+ curriculum opt-outs, porn site age checks, FCC broadband powers and birthright citizenship limits.

Recent decisions

The Court upheld ghost gun regulations, narrowed EPA authority, limited environmental review and expanded tax exemptions for religious nonprofits.


Full story

Today marks the final day of the Supreme Court’s term. Justices iddurf their last opinions of the judicial year Friday, June 27, during a public, non-argument session. 

Six high-profile decisions with significant implications for voting rights, public health, education, online safety, and presidential power were announced today.

According to Ballotpedia, the Supreme Court issued 65 opinions during its 2024-2025 session.

Gerrymandering and voting rights

In Louisiana v. Callais, the court did not make an immediate decision on whether the state’s 2024 congressional map unconstitutionally prioritized race. The justices set the case for reargument.

The 2024 congressional map created two majority-Black districts after a previous map was ruled likely to violate the Voting Rights Act. Plaintiffs argued the redistricting was a racial gerrymander, while the state says it aimed to protect Republican incumbents, including House Speaker Mike Johnson.

Birthright citizenship

In Trump v. CASA Inc., justices reviewed the legality of nationwide injunctions that have blocked President Donald Trump’s executive order, seeking to restrict automatic U.S. citizenship for children born to immigrants without legal status and foreign visitors. 

The Supreme Court granted the Trump administration a stay, allowing it to partially implement the president’s executive order ending birthright citizenship. The 6-3 decision in Trump v. CASA is not on the executive order’s constitutionality, but rather a ruling on the use of an esoteric legal maneuver — nationwide injunctions. 

The ruling could reshape how broadly lower federal courts can block federal policies, affecting both future administrations and major policy battles.

However, it’s not clear whether the Trump administration will be allowed to implement the birthright citizenship order. Justices ordered a district court to review the facts of the case. The court also said the order cannot go into effect at all for 30 days.

Preventive care and the Affordable Care Act

In Kennedy v. Braidwood Management Inc., the court upheld a portion of the Affordable Care Act that requires insurance plans to provide preventive care. This includes cancer screenings, contraception and vaccines. The judges ruled against Braidwood Management in a 6-3 decision.

The justices were asked to determine whether U.S. Preventive Services Task Force members, who help set mandatory coverage under the Affordable Care Act, were properly appointed.

The plaintiffs argued the task force lacks constitutional legitimacy, particularly in mandating HIV prevention drug coverage that they oppose on religious grounds.

FCC broadband subsidies

In Federal Communications Commission v. Consumers’ Research, the Supreme Court found Congress did not give the FCC too much power to manage a federal fund that supports broadband and phone service in rural and low-income areas. The 6-3 decision upheld the multi-billion-dollar Universal Service Fund’s constitutionality.

Challengers say the FCC’s authority and its use of a private company to help run the program violate constitutional limits on how much power Congress can delegate to agencies. 

The FCC argues the system is legal and essential for expanding access nationwide.

Age-verification for online pornography

In Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton, the justices upheld a Texas law that requires pornography websites to verify users are over 18. The 6-3 decision saw the conservative justices in the majority, and the liberal justices dissenting.

Industry groups said they thought the law violates free speech rights, while Texas argued it’s needed to protect minors. Lower courts upheld the law under a lower constitutional standard known as rational basis review. Challengers argued the court should apply strict scrutiny, which is typically used in First Amendment cases.

LGBTQ+ content in public schools

In Mahmoud v. Taylor, the court sided with religious parents in Maryland seeking the right to exempt their children from lessons that include LGBTQ+ storybooks, citing First Amendment protections. In another 6-3 decision, the justices in the majority emphasized the age of the children involved in the case.

During arguments in April, justices signaled potential support for broader parental rights in public education.

Which cases were decided previously?

In Catholic Charities Bureau v. Wisconsin Labor & Industry Review Commission, the Supreme Court ruled that Wisconsin wrongly denied a tax exemption to a Catholic nonprofit that provides social services. The state argued that the group’s work was too secular to qualify, but the justices found that distinction discriminatory. The decision could broaden tax exemption rights for religiously affiliated organizations.

In Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County, Colorado, the Supreme Court narrowed the scope of federal environmental reviews for major projects like rail lines and pipelines. The justices ruled unanimously that agencies only need to evaluate direct impacts, not broader effects like climate change. The case involved a proposed crude oil rail line in Utah.

In Bondi v. VanDerStok, the Supreme Court upheld a Biden administration rule requiring background checks and serial numbers for “ghost gun” kits — unassembled firearm parts that can be easily converted into working weapons. The 7–2 decision reverses a lower court ruling and finds that the 2022 rule, issued by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, aligns with the Gun Control Act of 1968. The Court found the rule consistent with the text of the law.

Alexandria Nohalty (Production Specialist), Devan Markham (Morning Digital Producer), and Kaleb Gillespie (Video Editor) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

Major pending Supreme Court decisions at the end of the term could set nationwide legal standards on issues such as presidential power, voting rights, free speech, healthcare, parental rights in education and executive authority, with implications for millions of Americans and future federal policies.

Presidential power and court injunctions

The Supreme Court's ruling on the scope of nationwide injunctions against presidential orders will define the balance of power between the executive branch and the judiciary, affecting how presidents' policies can be blocked or enforced across the country, as explained by multiple sources including CNN and AP.

Civil rights and public policy

Pending decisions involving voting rights, access to healthcare, and parental opt-out rights on LGBTQ-inclusive curricula in schools could impact protections for minorities and influence national debates over individual rights versus governmental policy, as discussed in sources such as The Independent and AFP.

First Amendment and online regulation

The upcoming ruling on age verification for online pornography and related First Amendment concerns illustrates ongoing legal challenges about balancing free speech with regulations aimed at protecting minors, a point raised by both Texas and industry groups in the court cases detailed by AP and other outlets.

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Community reaction

According to some sources, parents and religious groups in Maryland are pushing for the right to opt children out of LGBTQ-themed lessons, citing religious freedom. In Louisiana, civil rights advocates supported new congressional maps boosting Black representation, while opponents argue racial gerrymandering is unconstitutional. Advocacy groups like the Free Speech Coalition have mobilized against online age verification measures, citing privacy concerns.

Context corner

The debate over birthright citizenship centers on the 14th Amendment, whose interpretation has shaped U.S. citizenship for over a century. The trend of nationwide injunctions — court orders that block federal actions nationwide — has emerged over the past decade, becoming a critical tool for both Democratic and Republican administrations’ opponents to challenge broad executive actions.

Policy impact

Supreme Court rulings on issues like nationwide injunctions and Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood can shift how federal and state governments implement laws, alter healthcare access for low-income residents, and reshape boundaries for minority representation in Congress. Age verification rules may set new standards for adult content access, affecting privacy for millions.

Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame the Supreme Court’s conservative rulings as an assault on marginalized groups, using charged terms like “punching down” to depict decisions — such as upholding Tennessee's ban on gender-affirming care — as blatant discrimination, while sharply criticizing the Trump administration’s executive orders as unconstitutional overreach.
  • Not enough unique coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right emphasize Justice Clarence Thomas’s principled originalism and constitutional fidelity, celebrating him with terms like “Great” and “high-tech lynching” to portray him as a heroic figure resisting media bias and judicial activism.

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • The Supreme Court is set to make significant decisions affecting millions of Americans, with rulings on key issues such as birthright citizenship.
  • The Supreme Court previously upheld Tennessee's ban on gender-affirming care for minors, prompting dissent among justices regarding discrimination.
  • The court may favor parents in a case involving the right to opt-out of LGBTQ+ books in schools, impacting religious rights amid ongoing tensions over educational content.
  • The justices are reviewing whether Medicaid patients can sue to access care at any qualified doctor’s office, which could shape access to services under the Affordable Care Act.

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Key points from the Center

  • The Supreme Court issued a unanimous ruling in May 2024 in National Rifle Association v. Vullo, deciding that government efforts to punish companies for NRA ties violated the First Amendment.
  • This case arose amid ongoing legal challenges to Trump administration actions targeting law firms and organizations for speech disfavored by the former president.
  • The court is also deciding major cases on birthright citizenship, Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood and parents' religious rights against school policies on LGBTQ+ books.
  • In the Vullo decision, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that no government official can force citizens to conform politically or suppress disfavored speech, reaffirming free speech protections.
  • These rulings have the potential to significantly impact First Amendment freedoms, immigration policy, healthcare availability and the distribution of authority between the judicial and executive branches.

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Key points from the Right

  • Justice Clarence Thomas celebrated his 77th birthday while serving on the Supreme Court, known for his strong originalist opinions.
  • Thomas recently turned 77, marking a significant tenure on the Supreme Court with many influential decisions in recent years.
  • In U.S. V. Skrmetti, Thomas authored a concurring opinion supporting prohibitions on trans surgeries for minors and criticized the so-called expert class.
  • Thomas has consistently advocated for understanding and accessibility in judicial opinions, asserting that legal language should be understandable by all Americans.

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