Hard Numbers

Hard Numbers: The Supreme Court’s final countdown

​A view of the US Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on July 1, 2024.
A view of the US Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on July 1, 2024.
REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt

With one month left in the US Supreme Court’s term, the justices still have a number of massive decisions to make. Here’s a few left on the docket.

25: In a case that hits on the balance of powers, the justices will decide whether a district court has the authority to issue a nationwide ban on executive orders. The executive order in question is Donald Trump’s ban on birthright citizenship, although the US president faced another 25 nationwide injunctions on his executive orders in the first 100 days of his second term.

18: SCOTUS will decide whether Tennessee's ban of transgender youth-transition therapies – like puberty blockers and hormone therapy – for children under the age of 18 violated the 14th Amendment. What will decide the case? How the judges interpret the Equal Protection Clause of this Amendment.

2: The nine justices will decide if public schools violate parents’ religious rights by teaching gender and sexuality topics without notice or opt-out options. The case, brought by parents objecting to LGBTQ-inclusive books in the curriculum, drew two hours of intense arguments, leaving the outcome uncertain.

70-90: The Court is weighing whether US gun makers can be held liable for cartel crimes in Mexico. Mexico argues these gun manufacturers knowingly supply cartels and are complicit, and says 70–90% of traced guns used in crimes came from or through the US.

More For You

- YouTube

At the 2026 World Economic Forum in Davos, GZERO’s Tony Maciulis spoke with Ariel Ekblaw, Founder of the Aurelia Institute, about how scaling up infrastructure in space could unlock transformative breakthroughs on Earth.

Haitian soldiers keep a watch outside the venue where businessman Laurent Saint-Cyr is set to be designated as president of Haiti's Transitional Presidential Council (CPT), in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, August 7, 2025.
REUTERS/Fildor Pq Egeder/File Photo

On Friday, US officials warned the transitional council in charge of Haiti not to remove interim Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé, ahead of a deadline for the council to step down on Feb. 7.

Moldovan President Maia Sandu speaks during a Council of Europe diplomatic conference to launch the International Claims Commission for Ukraine, aimed at handling compensation claims related to Russia's war in Ukraine, in The Hague, Netherlands, December 16, 2025.
REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw

The president of the tiny eastern European country has suggested possibly merging with a neighbor.