Line from NPR News in Washington on Corva Coleman by ruling of 6-3, the U.
has upheld birthright citizenship.
“The decision breaks with President Trump, who signed an executive order, barring citizenship”
for children, board in the U.S. parents that either entered the country illegally or are in the U.S. on temporary visas, and appears Elena Moore reports. Trump signed that executive order on his first day back in office last year, and has argued that the Constitution does not ensure birthright citizenship, but that executive order quickly
faced legal challenges, and it was never implemented.
With lower courts instead, saying the move was on constitutional. Now the Supreme Court is backing that up, saying, quote, "children born in the United States to parents unlawfully or temporarily present our subject to the jurisdiction of the United States and our citizens at birth under the 14th Amendment's citizenship clause," and, quote, "elena Moore and peer news."
The U.S. Supreme Court has also issued an opinion stating that transgender women and girls may be banned from participating in sports at publicly funded schools. And peer's carry Johnson has more. This is actually a pair of cases out of West Virginia and Idaho that deal with when women and girls can participate in high school and college-level sports.
These involve out trans girls and women in these states and just as Brett Kavanaugh writing for the majority, has written that schools can determine eligibility for women in girl sports
“based on biological sex that that does not violate Title IX an important federal law in”
fear of security, Johnson reporting.
And in a third case, the Supreme Court has ruled on a major campaign finance matter.
That opinion was six to three. The conservative majority struck down limits on how much money political parties can spend when they work with a candidate running for federal office. The justice is ruled that the federal law limiting that coordinated spending violates the First Amendment.
Officials in Venezuela say the earthquake death toll is more than 1,700 people, tens of thousands of others are missing, Venezuelan Americans in the U.S. aren't mobilizing aid. Remember, station W. H. Y. Y. Emily Neal has more. Ariane Bracos says she and other Venezuelan Americans feel desperate watching the disaster unfold from afar.
This is one of the most difficult things about migrating to not be able to be there in the
“moment when they most need you and you can't be there in your country.”
Bracos, the vice president of Casa de Venezuela, Philadelphia, the nonprofit is teaming up with other organizations to collect money, medicine, and medical supplies to send to Venezuela. Bracos says relief efforts will continue to evolve in the coming weeks and months for MPR News, Emily Neal, and Philadelphia. And you're listening to MPR News.
President Trump says he is nominating acting labor secretary Keith Sonderling to the job permanently, Sonderling took over after labor secretary Lori Chavez de Remer stepped down, she'd faced allegations of abuse of power which she denied. Sonderling is a former commissioner of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. A judge in Michigan has ordered that prediction mark it's side, Calshy, stop most of its
activity in that state. As MPR's Bobby Allen reports, dozens of states are cracking down on the prediction market industry. Calshy says it will block anyone in Michigan from betting on sports after the state's attorney general accused the company of violating gambling laws.
The Michigan judge ordering the ban makes it the second state where Calshy has been pushed out following a similar restriction in Nevada. Both cases centered on sports betting on Calshy, which represents more than 80% of the apps betting. Unlike sports books, though, Calshy allows weight during on sports without the approval
of state regulators or having to pay state taxes. President Trump has vowed to protect the prediction market industry where traders can bet on everything from the color of Trump's tie to foreign policy decisions.
This month alone, Sonderling $30 billion traded on Calshy.
Bobby Allen and PR news, dangerous heat is lingering in the central U.S. and it's spreading to war in the East. Forecasters have posted extreme heat warnings from Tupika Kansas to Ann Arbor, Michigan, and South to Nashville, Tennessee. It will feel like more than 100 degrees today.
This heat is going to surge east in the next couple of days in extreme heat watches are posted up to New England. This is NPR. Every episode of it's been a minute, NPR's What's Happening in Culture Podcast starts by asking three questions, who, how, why now, if the culture's asking it, we're talking
about it. At NPR, we stand for your right to be curious and indulge your cultural curiosity. Follow its been a minute wherever you get your podcasts and we'll break down the zeitgeist


