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The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments Wednesday over President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs. Trump justified his import taxes under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.
Solicitor General D. John Sauer, representing Trump, was first up to the lectern, telling the court that Trump imposed the tariffs to deal with two dire emergencies: a persistent trade imbalance and the flood of fentanyl entering the United States.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Friday paved the way for the Trump administration to revoke temporary legal status for up to 600,000 Venezuelan immigrants, meaning some could ultimately be deported. The court granted an emergency request filed by the ...
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson decried the decision as “yet another grave misuse of our emergency docket.” The Supreme Court said Friday the Trump administration can for now strip temporary protections from hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants ...
Opposition supporters rally at the Parque de Cristal park, in Caracas, Venezuela, in 2019. Longtime unrest in the nation has sent many from Venezuela to the United States. Now, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that the Trump administration can resume its ...
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Court lets stand ruling that says UC’s ban on hiring students without legal status is discriminatory
The California Supreme Court has let stand a lower-court ruling that the University of California’s policy barring students without legal status in the US from campus jobs is discriminatory and must be reconsidered.
The top US court will soon hear arguments on whether Trump's tariffs are legal, with major implications for presidential power.
Four charts that explain the significance of the tariff case for the economy, the federal budget and consumers.
The Supreme Court is hearing arguments Wednesday over whether President Donald Trump has the legal authority to impose most of his sweeping tariffs, a high-stakes test of his signature economic policy.