The 9 Supreme Court Cases to Watch Next Term

5Mind. The Meme Platform

Starting October, the court will take up cases on major social and political issues, including males competing in female sports, redistricting, and IQ.

The Supreme Court will hear cases in the fall and winter dealing with hot-button social and political issues, ranging from males competing in female sports to pregnancy centers to redistricting.

After a high-profile ruling in June that allowing Tennesseeโ€™s ban on gender procedures for minors, the court will deal with transgender issues again in two cases challenging state bans on males competing in womenโ€™s and girlsโ€™ sports.

Another case, from New Jersey, looks at whether the pro-abortion state may subpoena donor information from pro-life pregnancy help centers.

The court will also look at three election law cases regarding campaign spending limits, redistricting according to race, and whether ballots received after Election Day can be counted.

Here is a look at the nine biggest cases to watch in the courtโ€™s 2025โ€“2026 term, which begins in October.

1. State Bans on Men in Womenโ€™s Sports
2. Coloradoโ€™s Ban on Conversion Therapy for Minors
3. Redistricting to Favor Minorities
4. Political Parties Coordinating Spending With Candidates
5. Challenge to Ballot-Counting After Election Day
6. New Jersey Sues Pro-Life Pregnancy Center for Its Donor List
7. Controversial Street Preacher
8. Afghanistan Veteran Challenges Defense Contractor
9. Weighing IQ and the Death Penalty

1. State Bans on Men in Womenโ€™s Sports

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear two cases tackling the issue of males competing against women in sports.

States have passed laws forbidding this practice, and in the cases Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J., transgender-identifying youth have sued to overturn those laws. In both cases, the plaintiffs said the laws violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment, as well as Title IX, a law that prohibits sex-based discrimination in schools that receive federal funds.

In March 2020, Idaho Gov. Brad Little signed a law banning men from womenโ€™s sports; the law still allows women who identify as males to compete with men.

Lindsay Hecox, a male who identifies as female, filed a suit challenging the law. Hecox wanted to compete on the Boise State University womenโ€™s teams for track and cross-country.

The district court ruled in favor of Hecox. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit upheld that decision in June 2024, finding that the law violated the equal protection clause by targeting transgender-identifying people. The appeals court also blocked the ruling from applying to parties not directly involved in the case.

Idaho appealed, which was accepted by the Supreme Court.

In West Virginia, a transgender-identifying middle-schooler known as B.P.J. in court documents sued to challenge the stateโ€™s Save Womenโ€™s Sports Act. B.P.J. had been participating in girlsโ€™ cross-country and track-and-field teams, regularly defeating female athletes, a court petition reads.

The state law, enacted in 2021, stipulates that womenโ€™s teams based on โ€œcompetitive skillโ€ or involving โ€œa contact sportโ€ must not be open to men.

Initially, a district court temporarily blocked the state law while the case was pending. But in its final decision, the court reversed the block and ruled that the law was constitutional. It found that the law actually strengthened Title IX, rather than violating it.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit paused this decision. In April 2023, the Supreme Court declined to lift the block while the case was playing out in the lower court. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissented.

In April 2024, the appeals court, in a 2โ€“1 decision, found that the law breached Title IX by discriminating against B.P.J. on the basis of sex.

The majority said the state had argued that โ€œthe Act does not discriminate based on gender identity because it treats all โ€˜biological malesโ€™โ€”that is, cisgender boys and transgender girlsโ€”the same.โ€

โ€œBut that is just another way of saying the Act treats transgender girls differently from [biological] girls, which isโ€”literallyโ€”the definition of gender identity discrimination,โ€ it said.

Judge G. Steven Agee of the Fourth Circuit disagreed.

โ€œIt is not enoughโ€”and is actually irrelevant when it comes to competitive sportsโ€”that B.P.J. identifies as a girl,โ€ he wrote in his dissent.

โ€œGender identity, simply put, has nothing to do with sports. It does not change a personโ€™s biology or physical characteristics. It does not affect how fast someone can run or how far they can throw a ball. Biology does.โ€

This is the latest case dealing with transgender issues to hit the high court. The past term saw a 6โ€“3 court upholding a Tennessee ban on the use of cross-sex hormones and puberty blockers for minors experiencing gender dysphoria.

In 2020, the court in Bostock v. Clayton County ruled 6โ€“3 that federal law bars employees from being fired from their jobs because of their sexual orientation or gender identity.

President Donald Trump has issued a series of executive orders that have affected people identifying as transgender. One order banned such individuals from military service. Lower courts blocked that order, but in May, the Supreme Court temporarily reinstated it to allow litigation challenging it to proceed in the appeals court.

Byย Matthew Vadum,ย Sam Dorman,ย Stacy Robinson

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

The Hungry Bear Society

SNAP benefit delays sparked online outrage as users threatened theft, riots, and violence if their โ€œfree moneyโ€ didnโ€™t arrive.

The Genius Of Trumpโ€™s Tariffs

Prior to the President Trump's administration, the United States played the role of โ€œUncle Sucker,โ€ and was the victim of unfair trade policies worldwide.

America Leads the World in Medical Bankruptcies!

America is grossly abnormal in the amount of citizens...

The Ostrich Bird Flu Saga: 300+ Birds Massacred and a Family Farm Destroyed

Canadaโ€™s food agency culled birds at Universal Ostrich Farms in British Columbia, citing public health concerns, sparking outrage over the action.

The Childless Factor: The Downfall of Society

A growing number of young adults have embraced a worldview where children are unnecessary at best and undesirable at worst.

Disruptions Raise Stakes for Senators as Record-Breaking Government Shutdown Hits 40th Day

Senate Majority Leader John Thune said on Saturday, โ€œWeโ€™re only a handful of votes awayโ€ from approving a bill to fund and reopen the government.

Economists Warn US Must Build Millions of Homes to End Affordability Crunch

Millennials and Gen Z, already burdened by inflation and weak job prospects, now face a worsening housing affordability crisis across the U.S.

2,500 Weekend Flights Canceled as US Government Funding Impasse Persists

Over 1,500 U.S. flights were canceled Nov. 8 after a government order cut operations at 40 airports; another 1,000 were canceled for Nov. 9.

Trump Urges Lawmakers to Give Healthcare Money โ€˜Directly to the Peopleโ€™

Trump proposed redirecting ACA funds from insurance companies to individuals as a compromise to break the U.S. government shutdown deadlock.

Trump Urges Senate Republicans to Redirect Federal Health Insurance Money to Americans

Trump urges GOP lawmakers to redirect ACA insurer funds to individuals, proposing a possible compromise amid the ongoing federal government shutdown.

Trump Considers Sanctions Exemption for Hungary as He Hosts Orban

Trump said he may exempt Hungary from sanctions, noting itโ€™s hard for Orban to secure oil and gas from elsewhere. โ€œWeโ€™re looking at it,โ€ he told reporters.

US Government Revokes 80,000 Visas

The Trump administration wonโ€™t hesitate to revoke visas of foreigners who โ€˜undermine our laws', the US State Dept. said after 80,000 visas were revoked.

Trump to Host Central Asian Leaders as US Shores Up Critical Mineral Supply

President Trump is hosting Central Asian leaders at the White House on Nov. 6, amid fast-tracked efforts to de-risk supply chains from China.
spot_img

Related Articles