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The Supreme Court ruled in favor of a USPS worker who didn't want to work the Sabbath, clarifying Title VII protections under the Civil Rights Act.

The Supreme Court unanimously ruled in favor of a Postal Service worker who did not want to work on Sundays to observe the Sabbath. The justices described Groff v. DeJoy as a clarifying decision and outlined what constitutes an undue hardship under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act.  The 1964 law requires employers to…

A federal judge ruled that most of North Carolina's new abortion law can take effect July 1 as originally planned.

A federal judge ruled that most of North Carolina’s new abortion law, including the ban on almost all abortions after 12 weeks, can take effect July 1 as originally planned. Lawyers for Planned Parenthood South Atlantic and a physician requested that U.S. District Judge Catherine Eagles put most of the new restrictions in the law…

As seen in USA v. Texas on immigration and the Biden student loan lawsuit, the court must sometimes decide if the plaintiffs have standing to sue.

The Supreme Court is making major decisions this year on student loans, affirmative action and election law. But in at least two cases, USA v. Texas on immigration law and the Biden student loan forgiveness lawsuit, the justices aren’t only deciding who wins and who loses based on the merits, but whether the plaintiffs have…

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