Supreme Court is dropping the rest of its biggest decisions in one final swoop

Birthright citizenship: limiting challenges to Trump's powers, Preventing students from reading LGBTQ+ books and minors from viewing porn, Conservative challenges to Obamacare and internet subsidies, Racial gerrymandering versus Black voting power

Six major rulings related to President Donald Trump and birthright citizenship, LGBTQ+ schoolbooks and online porn will be released in one final decision drop on June 27.

Most anticipated is whether the court will allow Trump to enforce his changes to birthright citizenship while his new policy is being litigated. The ruling could make it harder for judges to block any of the president’s policies.

Other decisions will determine if health insurers have to cover certain medicines and services, like HIV-preventive medication and cholesterol-lowering drugs, and whether a federal program that subsidizes phone and internet services through carrier fees is constitutional.

The Supreme Court still has to decide the last of three cases brought this year by religious groups. The justices will say if parents should be allowed to remove their elementary school children from class when storybooks with LGBTQ+ characters are being read.

The court’s pending opinion on Louisiana’s congressional districts could impact the 2026 elections as well as affect states’ ability to consider race when drawing legislative boundaries.

The court has already issued major rulings on guns, treatments for transgender minors, “reverse discrimination,” South Carolina's effort to defund Planned Parenthood, and how the Americans with Disabilities Act does or doesn’t protect retirees and help students who need specialized learning plans.

Here’s a look at what’s still to come:

Birthright citizenship: limiting challenges to Trump's powers

Trump’s executive order limiting birthright citizenship has been put on hold by judges across the country who ruled it’s probably unconstitutional.

During the May 15 oral arguments, none of the Supreme Court justices voiced support for the Trump administration’s theory on the matter. The administration says Trump's order is consistent with the 14th Amendment’s citizenship clause and past Supreme Court decisions about that provision.

But several of the justices have expressed concern about the ability of one judge to block a law or presidential order from going into effect anywhere in the country while it’s being challenged.

It was unclear from the oral arguments how the court might find a way to limit nationwide – or “universal” – court orders and what that would mean for birthright citizenship and the many other Trump policies being challenged in court.

Birthright citizenship: limiting challenges to Trump's powers, Preventing students from reading LGBTQ+ books and minors from viewing porn, Conservative challenges to Obamacare and internet subsidies, Racial gerrymandering versus Black voting power

U.S. President Donald Trump signs documents as he issues executive orders and pardons for January 6 defendants in the Oval Office at the White House on Inauguration Day in Washington, U.S., January 20, 2025.

Preventing students from reading LGBTQ+ books and minors from viewing porn

The court’s conservative majority sounded sympathetic in April to Maryland parents who raised religious objections to having their elementary school children read books with LGBTQ+ characters.

Birthright citizenship: limiting challenges to Trump's powers, Preventing students from reading LGBTQ+ books and minors from viewing porn, Conservative challenges to Obamacare and internet subsidies, Racial gerrymandering versus Black voting power

Maryland parents advocate for religious rights outside the U.S. Supreme Court on April 22, 2025, when justices heard oral arguments in Mahmoud v. Taylor. The parents are fighting a Montgomery County school board’s decision to prevent them from opting their children out of the district's reading program, which includes titles featuring LGBTQ+ characters and themes of inclusion.

And in a case about Texas’ requirement that websites verify users are 18 or over, one justice expressed her own parental frustration over trying to control what her children see on the internet. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who has seven children, said she knows from personal experience how difficult it is to keep up with the content-blocking devices that those challenging Texas’ law offered as a better alternative.

But while the justices were sympathetic to the purpose of Texas’ law, they may decide a lower court didn’t sufficiently review whether it violates the First Amendment rights of adults, so it must be reconsidered.

Conservative challenges to Obamacare and internet subsidies

The court is considering conservative challenges to Obamacare and to an $8 billion federal program that subsidizes high-speed internet and phone service for millions of Americans.

The justices seemed likely to reject an argument that the telecommunications program is funded by an unconstitutional tax, a case that raised questions about how much Congress can “delegate” its legislative authority to a federal agency.

The latest challenge to the Affordable Care Act takes aim at 2010 law’s popular requirement that insurers cover without extra costs preventive care such as cancer screenings, cholesterol-lowering medication and diabetes tests.

Two Christian-owned businesses and some people in Texas argue that the volunteer group of experts that recommends the services health insurance must cover is so powerful that, under the Constitution, its members must be appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.

Birthright citizenship: limiting challenges to Trump's powers, Preventing students from reading LGBTQ+ books and minors from viewing porn, Conservative challenges to Obamacare and internet subsidies, Racial gerrymandering versus Black voting power

A sign points the way during an Affordable Care Act sign-up event at Westside Family Healthcare's location in the Fox Run Shopping Center in Bear in 2014. 636410933476094107 Obamacare

Racial gerrymandering versus Black voting power

A challenge to Louisiana's congressional map by non-Black voters tests the balancing act states must strike, complying with a civil rights law that protects the voting power of a racial minority while not discriminating against other voters.

The outcome will also determine if the state can keep a map that gave Democrats an advantage in the disputed district, a decision that could make a difference in what could be a close battle for control of the House in the 2026 midterm elections.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Supreme Court is dropping the rest of its biggest decisions in one final swoop