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EMERGENCY DOCKET

Supreme Court sides with Trump in two DOGE suits

By Amy Howe on June 6 at 6:12 p.m.

The Supreme Court on Friday afternoon provided the Trump administration with two victories on the emergency docket. In one dispute, the justices put on hold a lower court’s order that had prevented the Department of Government Efficiency from accessing sensitive Social Security records. In the other, the court paused a district court order requiring DOGE to supply information to a government watchdog group as part of its lawsuit under the Freedom of Information Act.

The Supreme Court

The court’s orders came late on Friday afternoon. (Aashish Kiphayet via Shutterstock)

SCOTUS NEWS

Supreme Court adds four new cases to 2025-26 docket

By Amy Howe on June 6 at 9:08 pm

On Friday evening the Supreme Court added four new cases to its docket for the 2025-26 term. The cases involve a variety of issues, including capital punishment, federal sentencing, and a question of civil procedure.

OPINION ANALYSIS

Supreme Court rules for straight woman who claims she was subjected to reverse discrimination 

By Amy Howe on June 5 at 12:58 pm

The justices rejected a lower-court decision that required members of a majority group to meet a heightened standard on claims of employment discrimination. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote for a unanimous court, ruling for a straight woman who claims she was subject to reverse discrimination. Every individual receives the same protection under federal discrimination employment law, the court declared, whether they are a member of a majority or minority group.

OPINION ANALYSIS

Justices reject Mexico’s suit against gun manufacturers 

By Amy Howe on June 5 at 1:56 pm

The court unanimously ruled on Thursday that Mexico’s effort to hold gun makers liable for violence committed with U.S.-made weapons is barred under a 2005 federal law that shields the gun industry from lawsuits based on the misuse of guns by others. Justice Elena Kagan wrote for the majority that the lawsuit, which focuses on “downstream damages,” “closely resembles the ones Congress had in mind” when it passed the law protecting the gun industry from such suits.

Advocates in Conversation

2024-Jan-Snow-Banner-4B-scaled
San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu discusses City and County of San Francisco v. EPA, in which the court is considering whether the Environmental Protection Agency violates the Clean Water Act when it imposes generic prohibitions in a permit for a city’s water discharges, without specifying explicit standards for discharges.   
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EMERGENCY DOCKET

Trump asks Supreme Court to pause order reinstating Department of Education employees

By Amy Howe on June 6, 2025

The Trump administration came to the Supreme Court on Friday morning asking the justices to temporarily pause an order by a federal judge in Massachusetts that requires the Department of Education to reinstate nearly 1,400 employees who were fired as part of a reduction in force in March. U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer urged the Supreme Court to intervene, arguing that U.S. District Judge Myong Joun “is attempting to prevent” the Department of Education “from restructuring its workforce, despite lacking the” power to do so “several times over.” 

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OPINION ANALYSIS

Justices reject relaxed “catchall” standard for reopening a final judgment

By Ronald Mann on June 6, 2025

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) lists five specific reasons for which a court might reopen a judgment once it becomes final on appeal. It then closes with a catchall in Rule 60(b)(6) that authorizes reopening for “any other reason that justifies relief.” The court’s ruling in BLOM Bank SAL v. Honickman on Thursday reaffirms a high standard for that relief in an unsurprising decision that is unlikely to cause much of a stir.

Although the Supreme Court traditionally has required “extraordinary circumstances” to justify reopening under the catchall, the lower court here held that a more forgiving standard should apply when the disappointed litigant seeks reopening to file an amended complaint.

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OPINION ANALYSIS

Court rejects heightened requirement for arbitration awards under FSIA

By Ronald Mann on June 6, 2025

Thursday’s decision in CC/Devas (Mauritius) Limited v. Antrix Corp. was no surprise to anyone. As my story on the oral argument in March explained, nobody was willing to defend the standard adopted by the court of appeals. So a succinct and unanimous opinion from Justice Samuel Alito reversing the lower court is just what you would expect.

The case involves the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, adopted in 1976 to provide a comprehensive statutory framework for deciding when foreign states will, or will not, be immune from suit in federal court. Generally speaking, the statute recognizes the traditional rule that foreign states have sovereign immunity, but codifies a variety of exceptions, mostly related to various forms of commercial activity. For those exceptions, the statute includes a specific framework of precisely what the exception requires and what if anything else is required for a federal court to have subject-matter jurisdiction over the dispute and personal jurisdiction over the defendant.

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WHAT WE’RE READING

The morning read for Friday, June 6

By Zachary Shemtob on June 6, 2025

Yesterday, June 5, the Supreme Court issued decisions in Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services, Smith & Wesson Brands v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos, Catholic Charities Bureau v. Wisconsin Labor & Industry Review Commission, Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings v. Davis, CC/Devas (Mauritius) Limited v. Antrix Corp. Ltd., and BLOM Bank SAL v. Honickman.

Each weekday, we select a short list of news articles and commentary related to the Supreme Court. Here’s the Friday morning read:

Coming up: On Thursday, June 12, the court expects to issue one or more opinions from the current term. We’ll be live at 9:30 a.m. EDT that day for the opinion(s).