# Supreme Court End-of-Term Push: Trump Immunity and January 6 Cases Still Pending episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 14, 2026 · 3 MIN

# Supreme Court End-of-Term Push: Trump Immunity and January 6 Cases Still Pending

from Supreme Court Tracker - SCOTUS News · host Inception Point AI

According to the Supreme Court’s own docket and recent reporting from outlets like the Associated Press, CNN, and SCOTUSblog, the justices have spent the past few days in the thick of their end-of-term push, issuing opinions, managing emergency requests, and signaling what remains on their agenda before the summer recess. Listeners will have noticed that the Court is now regularly releasing decisions multiple mornings each week, and the focus has turned to a cluster of blockbuster cases still pending. Major attention remains on the Court’s looming rulings involving Donald Trump, including whether and to what extent a former president has criminal immunity for official acts, and a separate case on whether federal obstruction laws were properly used against some January 6 defendants. Coverage from outlets such as the New York Times and Washington Post notes that these decisions are expected to shape both the scope of executive power and the trajectory of ongoing prosecutions tied to the 2020 election and its aftermath. At the same time, legal news sources report that the justices have continued to act on the so‑called “shadow docket,” handling emergency applications on issues like election rules and immigration enforcement while avoiding full argument schedules. Conservative and liberal advocacy groups alike have been closely watching these quiet orders, since they can change state and federal policies almost overnight without the kind of detailed opinions listeners see in the headline cases. Ethics and transparency questions also remain in the background. According to Reuters and NPR, members of Congress and judicial watchdog groups have kept up pressure over undisclosed trips and gifts to some justices, renewing calls for a stronger enforceable ethics code. The Court adopted its first formal code of conduct last year, but critics argue it lacks teeth, and that debate is still coloring public reaction to every new decision. In the lower-profile cases that have been decided in the past few days, coverage by SCOTUSblog and major networks describes a pattern of narrower rulings, where the Court resolves disputes on technical or procedural grounds rather than sweeping constitutional pronouncements. That approach has shown up in cases involving federal regulatory power, criminal procedure, and access to federal courts, signaling to listeners that the justices are sometimes trying to build consensus at the margins even as they reserve their sharpest divisions for the term’s biggest fights. With more decision days expected over the coming weeks, outlets across the political spectrum are emphasizing that the most consequential rulings on presidential power, January 6, and key regulatory issues are still to come, and that these outcomes will likely reverberate through the election season and beyond. Thank you for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so you do not miss the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

According to the Supreme Court’s own docket and recent reporting from outlets like the Associated Press, CNN, and SCOTUSblog, the justices have spent the past few days in the thick of their end-of-term push, issuing opinions, managing emergency requests, and signaling what remains on their agenda before the summer recess. Listeners will have noticed that the Court is now regularly releasing decisions multiple mornings each week, and the focus has turned to a cluster of blockbuster cases still pending. Major attention remains on the Court’s looming rulings involving Donald Trump, including whether and to what extent a former president has criminal immunity for official acts, and a separate case on whether federal obstruction laws were properly used against some January 6 defendants. Coverage from outlets such as the New York Times and Washington Post notes that these decisions are expected to shape both the scope of executive power and the trajectory of ongoing prosecutions tied to the 2020 election and its aftermath. At the same time, legal news sources report that the justices have continued to act on the so‑called “shadow docket,” handling emergency applications on issues like election rules and immigration enforcement while avoiding full argument schedules. Conservative and liberal advocacy groups alike have been closely watching these quiet orders, since they can change state and federal policies almost overnight without the kind of detailed opinions listeners see in the headline cases. Ethics and transparency questions also remain in the background. According to Reuters and NPR, members of Congress and judicial watchdog groups have kept up pressure over undisclosed trips and gifts to some justices, renewing calls for a stronger enforceable ethics code. The Court adopted its first formal code of conduct last year, but critics argue it lacks teeth, and that debate is still coloring public reaction to every new decision. In the lower-profile cases that have been decided in the past few days, coverage by SCOTUSblog and major networks describes a pattern of narrower rulings, where the Court resolves disputes on technical or procedural grounds rather than sweeping constitutional pronouncements. That approach has shown up in cases involving federal regulatory power, criminal procedure, and access to federal courts, signaling to listeners that the justices are sometimes trying to build consensus at the margins even as they reserve their sharpest divisions for the term’s biggest fights. With more decision days expected over the coming weeks, outlets across the political spectrum are emphasizing that the most consequential rulings on presidential power, January 6, and key regulatory issues are still to come, and that these outcomes will likely reverberate through the election season and beyond. Thank you for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so you do not miss the next update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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# Supreme Court End-of-Term Push: Trump Immunity and January 6 Cases Still Pending

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This episode was published on June 14, 2026.

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According to the Supreme Court’s own docket and recent reporting from outlets like the Associated Press, CNN, and SCOTUSblog, the justices have spent the past few days in the thick of their end-of-term push, issuing opinions, managing emergency...

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