The Supreme Court, as per usual, has saved the biggest cases for last, with a big stack remaining—too many of which are about whether President Donald Trump can continue dismantling democracy.
I won't bother to talk about the immigration cases. It's quite certain that the conservative cabal will let convicted felon Donald Trump do whatever he wants to brown and black people-- cause of course, there's no more racism, right?
We’ve got Trump v. Cook, about whether Trump was allowed to fire Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve Board based on ginned-up mortgage fraud allegations from the egregiously bad Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte. Trump said he fired Cook “for cause” based on these unproven, uncharged allegations and that his decision can’t possibly be challenged. Following oral argument, it looks like Cook has the votes to stop Trump from firing her. But even if she wins, it comes at a huge cost—literally; she’s spent more than $1 million fighting this.
Here’s where things get a bit squirrelly. While simultaneously signaling that they’ll block Trump from removing people from the Fed, the court is also still sitting on Trump v. Slaughter, where he removed Rebecca Slaughter from the Federal Trade Commission. Sure, there’s a direct precedent that is nearly 100 years old, Humphrey’s Executor, which says that the president can’t fire an FTC commissioner without cause. But this is not a court that’s interested in following their own cases.
The Supreme Court conservatives have been playing a little shadow docket game here, letting Trump fire whoever he wants without directly saying they’re overruling Humphrey’s, but it’s looking pretty likely that they will rule in favor of Trump here. So we’re looking at the court possibly carving out a special exception to bar Trump from firing Fed board members—because conservatives love their 401(k)s and don’t love financial chaos—but to let him fire anyone else from any other agency as he pleases.
Does this make sense? Nope. Will the conservative majority care? Nope.
The most critical remaining case is Trump v. Barbara, the birthright citizenship case where Trump showed up to vaguely glower at the judges during oral argument and has been openly threatening the justices, demanding that they rule in his favor. From oral argument, it doesn’t look like he has the votes, but mostly it’s just shameful that the case even exists—a product wholly of Trump’s xenophobic malice propped up by MAGA law professors who somehow “discovered” that the 14th Amendment doesn’t say what it says. If and when Trump loses this one, he’s going to lose his mind worse than he did when his idiotic tariffs got shut down.
And finally, it wouldn’t be a Supreme Court term without an anti-trans case that looks to succeed—enshrining even more of Trump’s bigotry into law. Earlier this term, the court ruled that Colorado’s conversion therapy ban was likely unconstitutional, leaving LGBTQ+ children at the mercy of Christian “therapists” who “help” them by forcing them to be straight. It also upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care—but only for trans kids. This time around, it’s about banning trans kids from participating in sports. West Virginia v. B.P.J. and Little v. Hecox are combined cases challenging state bans on trans athletes. And from oral argument, it looks bad.
While we don’t know the outcomes yet, we do know one thing for sure: Whenever Trump and his ilk win, the rest of us lose.


