Supreme Court, SNAP
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The South Dakota Department of Social Services announced on Saturday that its planned implementation of full SNAP benefits by November 10 has been put on hold.
The Supreme Court is expected to be sympathetic to the religious rights of a Rastafarian whose dreadlocks were shaved off by Louisiana prison guards.
Landor v. Louisiana involves whether an inmate of a minority religious group, the Rastafarians, can sue for monetary damages after the warden violated his religious rights – specifically, the right to not cut his hair.
Trump has warned the Supreme Court will leave the U.S. "defenseless" if it strikes down his tariffs. The truth, though, is that he will still have plenty of options.
2don MSNOpinion
A good day for the separation of powers in the Supreme Court
Does the president of the United States have the power to set tariff rates unilaterally on all goods and services imported from any and every country on the planet for an infinite amount of time without any meaningful oversight from Congress or courts of law?
Today the Supreme Court is considering whether to take up a challenge to the landmark 2015 decision in Obergefell v. Hodges which legalized same-sex marriage. MSNBC Legal Affairs Reporter Fallon Gallagher and Senior Director of Civil Rights and Legal Strategies at GLAD Law Mary Bonauto,
Former Trump State Department official Christian Whiton joins ‘Mornings with Maria’ to discuss Kazakhstan joining the Abraham Accords, President Donald Trump’s push to free Jimmy Lai and the Supreme Court fight over tariff powers.