Supreme Court gun ban for drug users
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President Donald Trump considers attending Supreme Court oral arguments next month as tariff revenues reach record $215.2 billion in fiscal 2025.
The Second Amendment case tests a federal law used to convict Hunter Biden that bars drug users and addicts from possessing guns.
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Monday to hear a bid by President Donald Trump's administration in a case out of Texas to defend a federal law that bars users of illegal drugs from owning guns - one of the statutes under which former President Joe Biden's son Hunter was charged in 2023.
The case concerns the same law former President Joe Biden's son Hunter Biden was convicted of violating before his father pardoned him.
1don MSN
Supreme Court to decide constitutionality of law barring illegal drug users from having guns
The Supreme Court will decide whether a federal law that prohibits unlawful drug users from having firearms violates the Second Amendment.
The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to hear a bid by a group of physicians and healthcare providers to revive their antitrust lawsuit accusing drugmaker Merck of misleading federal regulators to maintain a decades-long monopoly over the mumps vaccine market.
Senior elections analyst Sean Trende joined the RealClearPolitics podcast on Friday for a deep dive into the oral arguments at the Supreme Court on Louisiana v. Callais this week about how Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act governs Congressional redistricting,
The U.S. Supreme Court will decide whether the use of race in drawing a majority-minority district to comply with the Voting Rights Act violates the Constitution.
A Supreme Court ruling, while technically temporary, could set the ground rules for National Guard deployments elsewhere in the country.