WASHINGTON — President-elect Donald Trump’s ambitious agenda could face pushback from an institution he has done much to shape: the Supreme Court.
With a 6-3 conservative majority including three Trump appointees, the court has spent the last few years buffeted by criticism from the left.
The Trump administration also suffered a big loss when in 2020 the court ruled 6-3 to extend workplace discrimination protections to LGBTQ employees, a decision that angered conservatives.
During the Biden years, the court has set new precedents while ruling against the administration that in theory apply to Trump too.
“The Supreme Court supermajority has given us no reason to expect that it will be anything other than be a rubber stamp for his worse impulses,” said Alex Aronson, who runs Court Accountability, a left-leaning legal group.
Persons:
Donald Trump’s, Biden, ”, John Malcolm, Brianne, “ Trump, Trump, Jonathan Adler, Amy Coney Barrett, Joe Biden, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Stephen Breyer, wasn’t, Adler, “, Alex Aronson, “ They’ve
Organizations:
WASHINGTON, Trump, Heritage Foundation, Case Western Reserve University School of Law, Congress