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The legal principle behind a more restrained Supreme Court term

It is the first question that must be answered in every U.S. Supreme Court case: Does the court have jurisdiction to hear the case at all?

The question of standing, as it is called, loomed large over the just-concluded term in cases covering everything from immigration policy to student loans to Native adoption law.

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There were death threats, ethics scandals, and polls showing that Americans lost trust in the Supreme Court. But this term, the opinions themselves offered a return – in several cases – of more modest rulings and unwillingness to entertain controversial theories.

Standing doctrine, per the U.S. Constitution, limits federal court jurisdiction to certain “cases” and “controversies.”

If this seems vague – well, it’s something that even the justices have criticized as easy to manipulate.

While not as historic, or divisive, as the term before it – which included decisions overturning the constitutional right to abortion and expanding gun rights – the conservative court still reshaped the law in significant ways. But this most recent term has shown that, in some cases, the high court is only willing to go so far. Some cases involving more radical arguments and theories failed. Notably, the court upheld a key provision of the Voting Rights Act and threw out a controversial legal theory that would have given state legislatures sole authority over federal elections. Both decisions were hailed by election experts as strengthening democracy.

This term’s opinions themselves were – with several key exceptions – less likely to rely on the raw power of the supermajority. Last term, there were 14 decisions split 6-3 on partisan lines. This term, there were five.

It is the first question that must be answered in every U.S. Supreme Court case: Does the court have jurisdiction to hear the case at all?

The question of standing, as it is called, loomed large over the just-concluded term in cases covering everything from immigration policy to student loans to Native adoption law.

Standing doctrine, per the U.S. Constitution, limits federal court jurisdiction to certain “cases” and “controversies.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

There were death threats, ethics scandals, and polls showing that Americans lost trust in the Supreme Court. But this term, the opinions themselves offered a return – in several cases – of more modest rulings and unwillingness to entertain controversial theories.

If this seems vague – well, not even the nine justices always agree, especially when it comes to cases brought by states against the White House. And it’s something that even the justices have criticized as easy to manipulate.

In 2007, for example, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in a dissent that the special consideration for states was emblematic of “how utterly manipulable [standing doctrine is] if not taken seriously as a matter of judicial self-restraint.”

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