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SCOTUStoday for Monday, January 12

By Kelsey Dallas, on Jan 12, 2026
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Today marks the start of the courtโs January argument session. The court will hear seven arguments over the next 10 days on such issues as transgender athletes competing in womenโs sports, gun rights, and President Donald Trumpโs bid to remove Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserveโs Board of Governors.
SCOTUS Quick Hits
- The Supreme Court released an opinion on Friday, but perhaps not the one you were expecting. The 5-4 ruling was in Bowe v. United States, a case on a federal prisonerโs efforts to obtain post-conviction relief. In an opinion from Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the court held that a federal law instructing courts to dismiss a claim presented in a second or successive habeas corpus application does not apply to motions filed by federal prisoners. Justice Neil Gorsuch filed a dissenting opinion, joined in full by Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, and in part by Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
- Also on Friday, the court indicated that it may announce opinions on Wednesday at 10 a.m. EST. SCOTUSblog will be live blogging any opinion announcements beginning at 9:30.
- Friday afternoon, the court announced that it had granted review in five cases. For more on these disputes, see the On Site section below.
- This morning, the court is expected to release an order list with denied petitions and other case updates at 9:30 a.m. EST.
- The justices will hear argument today in Chevron USA Inc. v. Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, on the circumstances in which a federal contractor can transfer a case from state to federal court. Justice Samuel Alito will not participate because he has a financial interest in ConocoPhillips, which is the parent company of one of the defendants.
- Tomorrow, the justices will hear arguments in Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J., on laws barring transgender athletes from participating on womenโs and girlsโ sports teams. We will be live blogging the arguments beginning at 9:30 a.m. EST.
Morning Reads
- Eyes are on Gorsuch as Supreme Court weighs rights of trans athletes (Julian Mark, The Washington Post)(Paywall) โ In 2020, Justice Neil Gorsuch โwrote one of the Supreme Courtโs most consequential rulings expanding legal rights for gay and transgender peopleโ in a case on employment discrimination. Now, โGorsuch is again in the spotlight,โ according to The Washington Post, as the court considers two disputes over laws preventing transgender athletes from competing in womenโs and girlsโ sports. The lawโs opponents are drawing on that 2020 ruling as they try to persuade Gorsuch to protect transgender athletes, per the Post, while the lawโs supporters argue that โsports is different from the workplace.โ
- Supreme Court, Swamped by Emergencies, Neglects Rest of Docket (Adam Liptak, The New York Times)(Paywall) โ The courtโs Friday ruling in Bowe v. United States has the distinction of being the first opinion in an argued case to be released this term. The fact that it didnโt arrive until January is notable, because โ[o]ver the last 80 years, the Supreme Court has only once before waited until January to issue its first opinion in an argued case,โ according to The New York Times. Experts specializing in Supreme Court advocacy told the Times that โa spike in action on the courtโs other docket,โ where the justices address requests for interim relief, โseems to have diverted the court from its merits docket,โ slowing the pace of opinions.
- These are the books families opted-out of after Supreme Court fight (Talia Richman, The Baltimore Banner) โ In a June 27 ruling in Mahmoud v. Taylor, the โSupreme Court sided with a group of parents [in Montgomery County, Maryland] who sought the right to opt-out of lessons that included LGBTQ storybooks,โ holding that refusing such opt-out requests violates religious freedom. Since then, according to The Baltimore Banner, โ[i]n a district of more than 156,000 students, just 56 families asked Montgomery County school leaders to excuse their child from reading books that conflict with their religious beliefs.โ These requests mostly came from โthe parents of elementary schoolersโ and โgenerally centered around books with LGBTQ characters, as well as those that included themes of diversity.โ
- Lawsuits by Trump allies could shape how the 2030 census is done and who will be counted (Mike Schneider, Associated Press) โ โThe next U.S. census is four years away,โ but legal battles over it have already begun, according to the Associated Press. โAllies of President Donald Trump are behind the federal lawsuits challenging various aspects of the once-a-decade count by the U.S. Census Bureau,โ including the inclusion of noncitizens. โThe first Trump administration also attempted to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census questionnaire, a move that was blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court.โ
- Supreme Court Clerk Hiring Watch: Happy New Hires (David Lat, Original Jurisdiction) โ In a post for his Substack, David Lat offered an update on Supreme Court clerk hiring and highlighted recent research on the jobs clerks typically have before and after working for a justice. He also highlighted various studies about clerkships, including investigations into what factors contribute to judges becoming feeder judges for the Supreme Court, such as the training they offer their clerks, personal relationships, and ideological compatibility.
Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: SCOTUStoday for Monday, January 12 – SCOTUSblog
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