Violence Is Their Only Answer
NYC Official Who Mocked Charlie Kirk's Death Is In Deep Trouble
You Won't Believe What Don Lemon Thinks of Those Upset About That Anti-ICE...
Anti-Gunner Hacks Use Martin Luther King Jr. to Push for Gun Control, but...
UNC–Chapel Hill Awarded Major Federal Grant to Expand Civic Education
A New Lawsuit Alleges Eric Swalwell Cannot Run for California Governor. Here's Why.
The Party of Science Debuts a Bold New Theory About Menopause
Guess What Brandon Johnson Blamed for 'Sowing Division in Our Communities'
Fashion Designer Valentino Garavani Dead at 93
A Wisconsin Mom Was Threatened With a Lawsuit After Speaking Up for Her...
The Week Deportations Stayed Strong—and Backing Off Would Be a GOP Disaster
16,500 Dead and 330,000 Injured As Iran’s Brutal Crackdown Brings Protests to a...
ADL Targets Tucker Carlson Ss It Teams With GOP Lawmakers to Fight Antisemitism
Byron Donalds Slams Gubernatorial Opponent Over ICE Policy, Vows Tough Stance on Illegal...
Texas School District to Host 'Islamic Games'
OPINION

Court Is Back in Session

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

While it seems like just yesterday that the Supreme Court went on vacation after its controversial (but correct) ruling in the Hobby Lobby contraceptive-mandate case, summer is over even for The Nine. Yesterday was the First Monday, the traditional start of the new Supreme Court term.

Advertisement

As of this writing, the Court has 50 cases on its docket, which is about on par with recent practice, such that we can expect 70-75 opinions at term’s end once the Court sets more cases for argument later in the term. Here are some of the issues: whether a policeman’s mistaken belief that someone had committed a traffic violation can form the basis for a lawful search (Heien v. North CarolinaCato’s brief); whether a prison can prohibit a Muslim inmate from growing a beard (Holt v. Hobbs); whether a fisherman can be prosecuted under Sarbanes-Oxley’s recordkeeping provision for throwing undersized fish overboard (Yates v. United States - Cato’s brief); whether Congress can force the State Department to recognize Jerusalem as part of Israel on U.S. passports (Zivotovsky v. Kerry); the circumstances under which criminal charges can attach to Facebook posts (Elonis v. United States Cato’s brief); and whether an occupational-licensing board gets immunity from liability for anticompetitive behavior (North Carolina Board of Dental Examiners v. FTC Cato’s brief). These cases don’t yet reach the high profile of recent terms, but if the Court takes up one of the same-sex marriage or Obamacare-subsidies lawsuits now at its doorstep, all bets are off.

Advertisement

For more detail on these and other cases, see the “Looking Ahead” essay in this year’s Cato Supreme Court Review, as well as these two previews.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement