"Supreme Court Shakes Up Voting Rights, Executive Power, and Criminal Justice: A Comprehensive Overview"

"Supreme Court Shakes Up Voting Rights, Executive Power, and Criminal Justice: A Comprehensive Overview"

The US Supreme Court has been at the center of several significant developments over the past few days, kicking off its new term with a packed docket and headline-making decisions. Just this morning, according to LAist and NPR, the Court heard arguments in a closely watched case that could decide the fate of a major provision of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. This specific provision, which governs redistricting, was unexpectedly upheld two years ago with Justice Kavanaugh casting the deciding vote, but observers are now speculating that he may be ready to revisit the issue. Chief Justice Roberts' historical opposition to the Voting Rights Act and the shifting majority on the bench have made court watchers especially attentive to this reargument, as the outcome could reshape the country’s voting rights landscape in a historically consequential way.

Meanwhile, the Court has agreed to decide Trump v. Slaughter this term, a blockbuster case that could vastly expand the president’s power to remove members of independent federal agencies like the Federal Trade Commission. The controversy began when President Donald Trump fired two Democratic FTC commissioners without stating a cause, sparking lawsuits and a lower court ruling that referenced the New Deal-era Humphrey’s Executor precedent protecting agency independence. The Supreme Court’s temporary order blocking the commissioners’ reinstatement signals a potential willingness to overturn or severely narrow that longstanding doctrine, and oral arguments are set for December. Court insiders, according to SCOTUSblog and Fisher Phillips, note this case could “reshape the nation’s separation of powers.”

The bench also handed down a decision Tuesday in a high-profile criminal case from Madhya Pradesh, reversing the acquittal of a father-in-law accused of murdering his daughter-in-law almost three decades ago. As covered by LiveLaw, the Supreme Court found the circumstantial evidence—medical details, false reports, and dowry demands—sufficient to restore the trial court conviction. Another notable criminal law action saw the Court restoring a criminal case against a former MLA accused of election fraud through falsified caste certificates, signaling the justices’ engagement with electoral integrity issues.

Workplace law is expected to feature prominently this term as well, with cases pending on whether states can ban transgender athletes from female sports teams and a dispute over union pension withdrawal liability. Furthermore, the Court recently confirmed that the federal Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act—PLCAA—does not provide blanket immunity to gun manufacturers, allowing certain lawsuits against gun makers to proceed on well-pled statutory grounds. The New Jersey Attorney General’s summary of the Smith & Wesson case underscored this point, rejecting arguments for complete immunity and leaving the way open for further statutory liability.

Rounding out the recent developments, the justices added a new criminal case to their docket involving the scope of a defendant’s right to appeal after pleading guilty, and announced oral arguments in several other closely watched disputes touching on the balance of executive power, union pensions, and LGBTQ participation in sports.

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