At a glance
A judge halted DOJ subpoenas against Minnesota officials investigating ICE enforcement, and the Supreme Court separately sided with Trump on green card revocation rules. Meanwhile, judges blocked the voter database, Stephen Miller's disability rights memo drew judicial scrutiny,
A federal judge halted DOJ subpoenas against Minnesota officials who were investigating ICE enforcement actions, blocking what looked like retaliation against state-level oversight. Separately, the Supreme Court sided with Trump on green card revocation rules, while other judges blocked a voter database project and raised questions about Stephen Miller's disability rights memo. The rulings split different directions, but the pattern shows courts are actively pushing back on specific immigration and voter targeting mechanisms rather than letting them move forward unchecked.
What's notable isn't that courts always rule one way—they don't. It's that judges are treating voter database and ICE retaliation cases as things worth halting before they're fully implemented. The disability memo scrutiny suggests courts are reading Miller's directives closely. These aren't sweeping constitutional victories for anyone. They're narrow interventions on particular tools and orders, which means the fight over each individual mechanism will continue in courts for months.
Citation trail
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