Supreme Court: New term brings opportunity for conservatives to flex muscles
The Supreme Court begins its new term Monday, Oct. 3.
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Melissa Quinn is a senior reporter for CBSNews.com, where she covers U.S. politics, with a focus on the Supreme Court and federal courts.
Melissa graduated from the University of Florida in 2012 with a degree in journalism and is now based in Washington, D.C. She began her journalism career working as a general assignment reporter for the Alexandria Times in Alexandria, Virginia, where she covered an array of issues impacting the local community, including local politics, crime and education.
Before joining CBS News in 2019, Melissa covered the Supreme Court, the White House and business for the Washington Examiner. She has appeared on CNN, Fox News and MSNBC.
The Supreme Court begins its new term Monday, Oct. 3.
"The thing is that a certain percentage of people will not heed the warnings regardless," Anderson said.
Trump claimed Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has a "death wish" after he backed a stopgap government funding bill.
Jackson took the constitutional and judicial oaths at the end of June.
Her husband was "completely unaware of my texts with Mark Meadows until this committee leaked them to the press while he was in a hospital bed fighting an infection," Ginni Thomas said.
The legislation now head to the House ahead of a Friday night deadline to avert a partial government shutdown and then to President Biden's desk for his signature.
A short-term funding measure unveiled by Democrats would keep federal agencies operating through mid-December.
Macron also met with former President Donald Trump for a state visit in 2018.
"That's going to be an important and interesting battlefield going forward for Second Amendment cases," said Joseph Blocher, an expert on the Second Amendment and professor at Duke Law School.
"What Putin has done is not exactly a sign of strength or confidence," Sullivan said.
"Maybe yesterday it was a bluff. Now, it could be a reality," Zelenskyy said on "Face the Nation."
Here's a look at the events that have transpired on the legal front since Trump asked the courts to intervene in the documents dispute.
Ayres pleaded guilty to one count of disorderly and disruptive conduct in a restricted building.
While Justice Department lawyers and Trump battle over access to the roughly 100 documents with classified markings, proceedings for the review of the materials retrieved from Mar-a-Lago by the outside arbiter have begun.
The former president's attorneys said the government is objecting to a "transparent process that simply provides much-needed oversight."