Trump wasn't the only Supreme Court winner this year. Here's the scorecard.New Foto - Trump wasn't the only Supreme Court winner this year. Here's the scorecard.

WASHINGTON −President Donald Trumpcelebrated what he called an "amazing decision," thanking each of the conservativeSupreme Courtjustices after the courtwrapped up its termon June 30. Conservative religious parents also cheered a major court ruling in their favor as the court continued its trend of siding with religious groups. But advocates for migrants, LGBTQ+ rights activists and others were left shaking their heads and vowing to find other ways to keep fighting on issues that went against them. And an appeals court that is proving to be more conservative than the Supreme Court racked up more losses. Here is a list of winners and losers from the court's term that began in October. President Trump The president called asurprise news conferencesoon after theSupreme Courtissued itsfinal rulingsof the term to praise the justices' work, including an opinion "that we're very happy about." "The Constitution has been brought back," Trump said about the conservative majority'sdecisionlimiting the ability of judges to block his policies from taking effect while they're being litigated. The opinion, which left uncertain which babies born in the United States will automitially become citizens,set off shockwavesamong migrant communities. Even before that decision, the Supreme Court had helped Trump by lifting through emergency orders many of the pauses lower courts had put on Trump's efforts to slash and restructure the federal government and to rapidly deport migrants. The Roberts, Kavanaugh and Barrett trio There's no doubt about who was in control of a court that continues to move the law in a conservative direction though not as much as some justices want. Chief Justice John Robertswas in the majority on nearly every decision, followed closely by JusticesBrett KavanaughandAmy Coney Barrett. On the decisions that divided the court, they sometimes sided with the three other conservatives including when they ruled that lower courts likely went too far when they blocked Trump's changes to birthright citizenship. The six conservatives were also united against the three liberals when theybacked banson gender affirming care for minors,age verification requirementsfor pornographic websites, states' efforts todefund Planned Parenthood, and parents' desire toremove their child from classwhen books with LGBTQ+ characters are being read. But at times Roberts, Kavanaugh and Barrett joined with the court's liberals – and against Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch. Those decisions included rejections ofconservative challenges to Obamacareand to afederal subsidy programfor internet and phone services for poor and rural communities that is funded by user fees. Don't like the Supreme Court's rulings?Chief Justice John Roberts has thoughts Religious groups Religious groupscontinued their recent winning streak at the high court though with an exception. On the biggest of the three cases brought by religious groups – the Oklahoma Catholic Church's bid to create the nation's first religious charter school – the courtdeadlocked4-4. But that's because Barrettrecused herselffrom the case, and the issue is expected to come back to the court with different participants that don't have ties to Barrett. The court has already teed upanother religion-based casefor the fall, whether prison officials can be sued for violating the religious rights of a Rastafarian inmatewhose dreadlocks were forcibly shavedby Louisiana prison guards. TikTok The court in Januaryunanimously uphelda law intended to effectively ban TikTok in the United States. So why is TikTok and its tens of millions of users a winner? Because Trump hasrepeatedly declined to enforce the law, saying he's working on an alternate solution to the national security concerns. More:Trump wins again. Conservatives like Amy Coney Barrett again. Supreme Court takeaways 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals The appeals court that is arguably the most conservative in the country did not fare wellagain. The justices agreed to hear more appeals from the Louisiana-based 5thU.S. Circuit Court of Appeals than from any other circuit and reversed more of its decisions, according todata compiled by SCOTUSblog. The times they did so included in rulingsupholdingthe Biden administration's regulation of untraceable "ghost guns, the Food and Drug Administration's rejection offruit- and candy-flavored vaping products, and Obamacare'srequirementthat insurers have to cover cancer screenings and other preventive care services recommended by a task force. Environmental regulations The court continued a years-long trend of narrowing federal protections for the environment, includingtaking awaya tool the Environmental Protection Agency used to control water pollution. The court alsolet federal agencies scale backtheir environmental reviews of projects in a case involving construction of a railway in Utah. And the court said fuel producerscan challengeCalifornia's standards for vehicle emissions and electric cars under a federal air pollution law. LGBTQ+ rights Five years afterrulingthat transgender people, as well as gay and lesbian people, are protected by a landmark civil rights law barring sex discrimination in the workplace, the courtupheldTennessee's ban on gender affirming care for minors, The ideologically divided court said the ban does not discriminate against transgender people because the restrictions turn on age and the purpose of the medical treatment, not whether the patient is transgender. In a different case, the courtsaidparents with religious objections to books with LGBTQ+ characters must be allowed to remove their children from class when those books are being used. And in an emergency order, the courtallowed Trumpto enforce his ban on transgender people serving in the military while that policy is being challenged. Days after adjourning for the summer, the court announced it'staking upnext term states' bans on transgender athletes joining female sports teams. Gun regulations While the courtsaid"ghost guns" can be subject to background checks and other requirements, itrejectedMexico's attempt to hold U.S. gunmakers liable for violence caused byMexican drug cartelsarmed with their weapons. But gun violence prevention groups were relieved that, in siding with the gunmakers, the court didn't give the gun industry the broad immunity it sought. The groups are hopeful they can continue to hold gun makers accountable if they break the law. Parental rights While the courtruled againstthe Tennessee parents who want to get gender affirming care for their children, the justicesbackedparental rights in the case about LGBTQ+ storybooks. And the court's decisionupholdingTexas' age verification law for pornographic websites may have been foreshadowed during oral arguments whenBarrett saidshe knows from her experience as a parent of seven children how difficult it is to keep up with the content blocking devices that those challenging Texas' law offered as a better alternative. Disability rights The courtsided with a Minnesota teentrying to use the Americans with Disabilities Act to sue her school for not accommodating her rare form of epilepsy that makes it difficult to attend class before noon. That decision will make it easier for families to use the ADA to sue schools for damages over the lack of an accommodation for a learning disability. But the courtsided against a retired firefighterwho argued the ADA protects retirees as well as those able to work. The justices said the firefighter, who left the force due to Parkinson's disease, could not sue her former employer for reducing health care benefits for disabled retirees. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:The winners (and losers) from major Supreme Court decisions

Trump wasn't the only Supreme Court winner this year. Here's the scorecard.

Trump wasn't the only Supreme Court winner this year. Here's the scorecard. WASHINGTON −President Donald Trumpcelebrated what he cal...
France and Britain hope migrant 'taxi boat' plan will slow record Channel crossingsNew Foto - France and Britain hope migrant 'taxi boat' plan will slow record Channel crossings

By Gabriel Stargardter PARIS (Reuters) -Early one morning this week, a dinghy motored along a vast beach in northern France, stopping every few hundred metres to pick up migrants bound for Britain. Four French police gave chase, but failed to reach the migrants before they reached water's edge. Soon, with 70-odd people onboard, the dinghy began chugging across the sea, adding to a record-breaking number of migrants crossing the Channel this year. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's right-wing opponents have seized on the data, reminding him he had pledged to "smash" the trafficking gangs. France and Britain hope to unveil measures at their summit next week that will reportedly allow French police to intercept such 'taxi boats' - a new phenomenon - up to 300 metres (yards) from shore rather than only if lives are at risk as now. Police, activists and migrants interviewed by Reuters were sceptical such a plan would work. "I just don't see how this could ever be implemented," said Julien Soir, a police union representative in the northern city of Lille. "Getting it up and running is simply impossible." He said police were already stretched covering 180 km (112 miles) of coastline and lack the equipment and training needed for seaborne operations. Police also fear drowning if they fall in the water with heavy equipment, or personal legal liability if migrants die or are injured during an intervention. Angele Vettorello, a coordinator at the Utopia 56 charity in Calais, said numbers were rising despite more French police patrolling beaches, including with British-sponsored drones. She said the proposed measures would only make a dangerous crossing - last year 73 migrants died navigating what is one of the world's busiest shipping lanes - more perilous. If implemented, it would "lead to even more deaths ... more distress," she said. RIGHT-WING RISE The influx of migrants has helped Nigel Farage's Reform UK overtake Starmer's Labour Party in polls. Farage, a right-wing populist and longtime immigration hard-liner, has proposed using the Navy to intercept migrant vessels and take them back to France. Lawyers say this could only be done if France agreed. Nearly 20,000 asylum seekers have arrived in Britain via small boats so far this year, a 50% increase compared to the same period in 2024. French and British authorities blame the spike on unusually good weather. Peter Walsh, from Oxford University's Migration Observatory, said maritime interception may stop more migrants but would not affect long-term trends behind the migrant surge, including multiple conflicts and the allure of English-speaking Britain. Britain also wants to negotiate a returns agreement with France, which it had before it left the European Union. At a filthy migrant camp near Dunkirk, Reuters spoke with several migrants who were unaware of the new proposal. They said it wouldn't stop them from trying to cross. Israrullah Lodin, 26, left Afghanistan in 2021 after his family's work with the U.S. army irked the Taliban. He had failed to cross three times; twice he was stopped by police and once his boat had problems. Lodin dreamed of working in a UK fulfilment warehouse. Nothing would stop him from getting there. "We are not afraid to die," he said. "I have to reach my destination." Nisarahmad Afghan, 23, had been a migrant almost all his adult life, having left his home region of Nangarhar four years ago. He had made two failed attempts to cross, both foiled by police. "Until I succeed, I will keep trying," he said. "I've passed through many dangerous roads. I will pass this one too." (Additional reporting by Mohammad Yunus Yawar in Kabul; Marco Trujillo, Manuel Ausloos, Abdul Saboor, Gonzalo Fuentes in Calais; Michael Holden in London; editing by Richard Lough and Philippa Fletcher)

France and Britain hope migrant 'taxi boat' plan will slow record Channel crossings

France and Britain hope migrant 'taxi boat' plan will slow record Channel crossings By Gabriel Stargardter PARIS (Reuters) -Early o...
Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next yearNew Foto - Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year

Get ready to see some punches on the White House grounds. President Trump says he will host a UFC mixed martial arts fight at the White House as part of next year's festivities celebrating 250 years of American independence. The idea came up during a Thursday night speech at the Iowa State Fairgrounds, one year and one day before the 250th anniversary of the 1776 ratification of the Declaration of Independence. The federal government is planning to mark the occasion with a year's worth of events — including a UFC fight, according to Mr. Trump. "We're going to have some incredible events," the president said. "Some professional events, some amateur events. But the UFC fight is going to be a big deal, too." Further details on the event, which is not lacking for possible names (the Rose Garden Fight Night? Oval Office Octagon?), are unclear. But the president is "dead serious" about the idea, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told a pool reporter on Thursday. A UFC spokesperson also confirmed the plans to CBS News. Mr. Trump described it as a "championship fight, full fight" with 20,000 or 25,000 spectators — a tall order for the White House grounds, though Mr. Trump said, "we have a lot of land there." He said longtime UFC CEO Dana White will organize the event. "It's going to be EPIC!" wroteLeavitt on X. The president's ties to the UFC go back to at least 2001, when the Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic Cityhostedthe mixed martial arts enterprise. Since then, Mr. Trumphas periodicallyattended UFC fights, includinglast month. The president is also close with White, who helped introduce Mr. Trump at last summer's Republican National Convention and took the stage at Mr. Trump's election night victory party. Mr. Trump plugged a handful of other America250 events in his Thursday speech, including a "Great American State Fair," a National Mall celebration and an athletic competition called the "Patriot Games." "I think it's going to be a wild time," Mr. Trump told reporters after returning to the D.C. area following the speech. Bryan Kohberger Pleads Guilty | "48 Hours" Podcast CBS News journalists describe what it was like to report on Sean "Diddy" Combs trial Skydiving plane crashes in New Jersey, several hospitalized

Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year

Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year Get ready to see some punches on the White House grounds. President T...
Pasquantino hits two-run single in 7th inning as Royals beat Mariners 3-2New Foto - Pasquantino hits two-run single in 7th inning as Royals beat Mariners 3-2

SEATTLE (AP) — Vinnie Pasquantino had a two-run single in the seventh inning and the Kansas City Royals beat the Seattle Mariners 3-2 on Thursday night. Bobby Witt Jr. tied the score 1-1 with a single to center field with one out and then stole second base to put two runners in scoring position. Pasquantino grounded a single to right field drive in both runners, with Witt scoring aftermaking an elusive move to avoid the tag from catcher Cal Raleighto give the Royals a two-run lead. Seth Lugo (6-5) allowed just one run on six hits in 6 1/3 innings. He walked two and struck out seven. Lucas Erceg and Taylor Clarke got two outs each, and Carlos Estévez pitched 1 1/3 innings to get his 24th save. Estévez gave up a leadoff homer to Dominic Canzone in the ninth and had runners on second and third after a wild pitch with one out, but struck out Julio Rodríguez and got Raleigh to ground out to end the game. Jorge Polanco homered in the fourth inning to put the Mariners up 1-0, and also had two doubles,. Logan Evans, recalled from Triple-A Tacoma, made his first big league start since May 10 and gave up three hits in 5 2/3 scoreless innings. He walked one and struck out three. Casey Legumina (4-4) walked the first two batters to begin the seventh inning and was replaced by Carlos Vargas, who gave up the run-scoring hits to Witt and Pasquantino. Key moment The Royals capitalized on consecutive walks by Kyle Isbel and Jonathan India against Legumijna to start the seventh, setting the stage for Witt and Pasquantino. Key stat Witt has now hit safely in his last 23 road games, breaking Hal McRae's 42-year-old Kansas City record. Up next Royals LHP Kris Bubic (6-6, 2.25 ERA) opens a three-game series at Arizona against Diamondbacks LHP Eduardo Rodriguez (3-4, 5.13). Mariners RHP Bryan Woo (7-4, 2.93 ERA) faces Pirates LHP Bailey Falter (7-4, 2.93). ___ AP MLB:https://www.apnews.com/hub/MLB

Pasquantino hits two-run single in 7th inning as Royals beat Mariners 3-2

Pasquantino hits two-run single in 7th inning as Royals beat Mariners 3-2 SEATTLE (AP) — Vinnie Pasquantino had a two-run single in the seve...
Blistering heat, empty chairs and the C-word mar UN's flagship development eventNew Foto - Blistering heat, empty chairs and the C-word mar UN's flagship development event

By David Latona SEVILLE (Reuters) -Brutal heat scorched Spain this week, a blistering reminder of the climate change that is battering the world's poorest countries - stretching their finances even as government debt climbs to new heights. But at a once-a-decade UN development finance conference in Seville, two key ingredients were in less abundance: money and power. Just one G7 leader - France's Emmanuel Macron - attended the event, where he and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez addressed rooms filled with dozens of empty chairs. Organisers initially said they expected 70 heads of state; that was whittled to 50 as the conference got underway. Back in Washington, Paris, London and Berlin, rich-country leaders are slashing aid and cutting bilateral lending in a pivot to defence spending and rising debt at home. "The mood is ... I would say realistic, but also a sense of unity and of pragmatism," said Alvaro Lario, president of the International Fund of Agricultural Development, adding the question on everyone's mind this week was how to do more with less. "How can we come together, or think out of the box, or create new type of ways of really stretching it more?" The Financing For Development meeting is a flagship UN conference, charting the trajectory to help tackle changes the world must make to tax policies, aid spending or key areas such as debt, health and education. Its outcomes guide global aid funding and UN policies for the decade to come. EMPTY CHAIRS, MISSING LEADERS Few disagree over the need for action; hundred-year floods and storms are happening with alarming regularity, and rising debt-servicing costs are siphoning money away from health, education and infrastructure spending in the developing world. But even top developing-world leaders Mia Mottley, the Barbados prime minister and prominent global climate champion, and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, currently chairing the Group of 20 major economies, backed out of the event at the last minute. The media room was stacked with bored-looking Spanish press gossiping about a domestic political scandal while disillusioned civil-society leaders stalked the halls, upset with the watered-down agenda and the lack of fiscal or political firepower. "We are facing a backsliding of many agendas that we had advanced a few years ago," said Henrique Frota, director of ABONG, a Brazilian association of NGOs. "Developed countries are reducing their investment in (official development assistance) and European countries are not fulfilling their commitment ... they are giving less and less money right now for every kind of agenda." Event leaders were relieved to produce an outcome document - despite gnawing fears in the past months that Washington would torpedo any deal. In the end, U.S. officials backed out altogether. "The entire community was very afraid of coming here because one country wasn't attending," said UN Assistant Secretary General Marcos Neto. "But the document ended up working out ... I'm leaving happy, with more optimism than I thought I would leave with." Neto highlighted significant steps toward implementing climate and development goals, including the Seville Platform and multiple agreements from public and private sectors to leverage funds for the biggest possible impact. The Seville Commitment included tripling multilateral lending capacity, debt relief, a push to boost tax-to-GDP ratios to at least 15%, and get more rich countries to let the IMF use "special drawing rights" money for countries that need it most. But in Seville, only host nation Spain signed on to commit 50% of its "Special Drawing Rights" for the purpose. THE C-WORD UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed acknowledged that the attendance was not as star-studded as hoped, and that public funds are under pressure. "But there's innovative financing, there's the private sector, there's the triple lending of MDBs ... so the resources are there," she said. "We just have to have the political will to leverage through these mechanisms that have come out of the platform of action and continue moving with them." U.S. President Donald Trump, despite his country's absence, loomed large over the event; his climate change scepticism, hostility toward diversity initiatives and pledge to review U.S. participation in multilateral organizations made some keen to strip the "c-word" - climate change - and rebrand initiatives as focused on resilience, education or health. Still, some say the gloomy backdrop should not deter leaders focused on progress. "Ultimately the important thing is doing it," said Jose Vinals, former group chairman of Standard Chartered and co-chair of both the FFD4 Business Steering Committee and the Global Investors for Sustainable Development Alliance. "The private sector is, for the most part, still willing to walk the talk." (Reporting by David Latona in Seville; Additional reporting by Karin Strohecker, Simon Jessop and Marc Jones in London; Writing by Libby George; Editing by Daniel Wallis)

Blistering heat, empty chairs and the C-word mar UN's flagship development event

Blistering heat, empty chairs and the C-word mar UN's flagship development event By David Latona SEVILLE (Reuters) -Brutal heat scorched...
Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next yearNew Foto - Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year

Get ready to see some punches on the White House grounds. President Trump says he will host a UFC mixed martial arts fight at the White House as part of next year's festivities celebrating 250 years of American independence. The idea came up during a Thursday night speech at the Iowa State Fairgrounds, one year and one day before the 250th anniversary of the 1776 ratification of the Declaration of Independence. The federal government is planning to mark the occasion with a year's worth of events — including a UFC fight, according to Mr. Trump. "We're going to have some incredible events," the president said. "Some professional events, some amateur events. But the UFC fight is going to be a big deal, too." Further details on the event, which is not lacking for possible names (the Rose Garden Fight Night? Oval Office Octagon?), are unclear. But the president is "dead serious" about the idea, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told a pool reporter on Thursday. A UFC spokesperson also confirmed the plans to CBS News. Mr. Trump described it as a "championship fight, full fight" with 20,000 or 25,000 spectators — a tall order for the White House grounds, though Mr. Trump said, "we have a lot of land there." He said longtime UFC CEO Dana White will organize the event. "It's going to be EPIC!" wroteLeavitt on X. The president's ties to the UFC go back to at least 2001, when the Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic Cityhostedthe mixed martial arts enterprise. Since then, Mr. Trumphas periodicallyattended UFC fights, includinglast month. The president is also close with White, who helped introduce Mr. Trump at last summer's Republican National Convention and took the stage at Mr. Trump's election night victory party. Mr. Trump plugged a handful of other America250 events in his Thursday speech, including a "Great American State Fair," a National Mall celebration and an athletic competition called the "Patriot Games." "I think it's going to be a wild time," Mr. Trump told reporters after returning to the D.C. area following the speech. Bryan Kohberger Pleads Guilty | "48 Hours" Podcast CBS News journalists describe what it was like to report on Sean "Diddy" Combs trial Skydiving plane crashes in New Jersey, several hospitalized

Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year

Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year Get ready to see some punches on the White House grounds. President T...
Mavericks would only be interested in LeBron James 'in a buyout situation': ReportNew Foto - Mavericks would only be interested in LeBron James 'in a buyout situation': Report

Don't count the Dallas Mavericks in for another league-altering trade with the Los Angeles Lakers this year. "Dallas, I'm told that they would only be interested in LeBron [James] in a buyout situation," ESPN's Dave McMenamin reported Thursday on ESPN Radio 710 in Los Angeles. In other words,ifJames were to become a free agent, the Mavericks would be interested. "Dallas—I'm told—they would only be interested in LeBron [James] in a buyout situation." -@mcten👀#MFFL(🎥:@ESPNRadio)pic.twitter.com/b0Tle0eFXh — Kevin Gray Jr. (@KevinGraySports)July 3, 2025 That's a big "if" and so is James actually relocating. But the all-time great's status has been closely monitored around the league ever since his agent, Rich Paul,gave ESPN a statementindicating the conditionality of James' commitment to the Lakers, even after he picked up his $52.6 million player option with the organization over the weekend. "LeBron wants to compete for a championship," Paul told ESPN. "He knows the Lakers are building for the future. He understands that, but he values a realistic chance of winning it all. We are very appreciative of the partnership that we've had for eight years with Jeanie [Buss] and Rob [Pelinka] and consider the Lakers as a critical part of his career. "We understand the difficulty in winning now while preparing for the future. We do want to evaluate what's best for LeBron at this stage in his life and career. He wants to make every season he has left count, and the Lakers understand that, are supportive and want what's best for him." James is a 40-year-old, four-time NBA champion that is still hungry for another title. The pressure has been on the Lakers this week to support James with a championship-caliber roster. They took a hit Monday when versatile frontcourt pieceDorian Finney-Smith agreed to sign with the Houston Rockets. Los Angeles has since made moves to bring oncenter Deandre Aytonand reserve forward Jake LaRavia. The question remains, however, if the Lakers will have enough to satisfy James, who has won one championship since joining the franchise in 2018. As for Dallas, the Mavericks could be an attractive landing spot for James, given his ties to Kyrie Irving and Anthony Davis. James won a championship with Irving in Cleveland and another with Davis in Los Angeles, and he'd not only join them but also a five-time All-Star and four-time NBA champ in Klay Thompson. The Mavericks' roster is now headlined by No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg, who, like James, is another do-it-all forward. But again, according to McMenamin, the Lakers would have to buy out James' contract for the Mavericks to be interested in adding the four-time league MVP. James notably has a no-trade clause in his Lakers contract. So if he did want to be traded, he would have control over his destination. But McMenamin has his doubts about James leaving the Lakers. "Let's keep bringing this up because I don't think it's getting enough attention," McMenamin said on ESPN Radio 710 in Los Angeles. "His son's on the Lakers. So he's going to go get a trade away from his son?" McMenamin emphasized that packaging LeBron James and Bronny James in a deal would prove difficult because of how much their contracts would cost together.

Mavericks would only be interested in LeBron James 'in a buyout situation': Report

Mavericks would only be interested in LeBron James 'in a buyout situation': Report Don't count the Dallas Mavericks in for anoth...

 

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