The U.S. Supreme Court is in session! The nation’s highest court is preparing to weigh in on a number of important issues facing the nation.
The justices, or judges, of the Supreme Court have the final say on whether laws are constitutional. Supreme Court decisions become the law of the land. The justices serve for life, and their decisions affect all Americans—including teens—on an everyday basis.
The Court usually has nine justices, but it has been operating with just eight for nearly a year. The ninth seat has been empty since Justice Antonin Scalia died last February. The Republican-controlled Senate refused to consider any nominee until after the 2016 presidential election. President Donald Trump is expected to move quickly to fill the Court’s vacancy with a conservative justice.
“Trump has pledged to nominate someone [similar to] Justice Scalia, so if that person gets confirmed [by the Senate], we won’t see a huge change in the Court,” according to Jeffrey Fisher, a law professor at Stanford University in California.
Trump’s appointment will likely restore the Court to the same balance it had before Scalia’s death: four conservative justices, four liberal justices, and one swing vote.
The Supreme Court is asked to hear approximately 8,000 cases each term—but accepts only about 80. Here’s a look at four key cases on the schedule this term.