
The cases on the court’s calendar so far pose other significant questions for the justices: Can states prevent transgender adolescents from obtaining certain gender-affirming medical treatments? Can the Biden administration regulate homemade “ghost guns” in the same way as other firearms? Do age-verification requirements to protect minors from online pornography violate the First Amendment rights of adults?
Looming in the background is the November contest between Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris — and the likelihood that a slew of lawsuits over counting ballots and voting access will draw the Supreme Court into election-related disputes.
“I don’t think the court wants to get involved, but it may be forced to,” David Cole, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union, said during a term-preview discussion led by Georgetown Law’s Supreme Court Institute.
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