Trump-dominated Supreme Court is more divided than ever
- The Supreme Court has ended one of its most ideologically divided terms in decades, with six conservative justices on the nation’s high court splitting from the three liberals in nearly a quarter of the cases argued before them.
- Justices were ideologically split in at least 13 argued cases this term, including in high-profile decisions on voting rights, presidential power and birthright citizenship, among other landmark cases with far-reaching impacts.
- The court’s six conservative justices voted together against three dissenting liberals more than 22 percent of the time, compared to just 10 perc
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- The Supreme Court has ended one of its most ideologically divided terms in decades, with six conservative justices on the nation’s high court splitting from the three liberals in nearly a quarter of the cases argued before them.
- Justices were ideologically split in at least 13 argued cases this term, including in high-profile decisions on voting rights, presidential power and birthright citizenship, among other landmark cases with far-reaching impacts.
- The court’s six conservative justices voted together against three dissenting liberals more than 22 percent of the time, compared to just 10 perc
Sources: The Independent