The Supreme Court is set to rule in a series of high-profile cases in the next six months, including President Biden's bid to revive his student loan forgiveness plan and his efforts to reshape immigration policy.
In another immigration-related case, the court hason the Biden administration’s attempt to implement its immigration enforcement priorities.
A Harvard Law School graduate, Prelogar has served in the Biden Justice Department since the beginning of the administration and was confirmed by the Senate to her current role in October 2021. Earlier in her career, she clerked for two liberal justices: Elena Kagan and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.No case is likely to be more important to the administration than the fight over, with the court hearing oral arguments in two cases challenging the policy.
The omens are not good for the administration based on how the conservative majority has handled other cases in which the government was accused of overstepping its authority. The court in January blocked Biden’s vaccine mandate for large employers for that very reason. In Aug. 2021, it also prevented the administration from extending an eviction moratorium during the pandemic.
It is not just in defense of its own policy decisions that the administration has faced an uphill battle. It has also been on the losing side in arguing as a friend of the court against dramatic changes in the law on culturally divisive social issues, including in the seismic abortion case decided in June.
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