Is SCOTUS:GannonFan wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 9:24 amThen let's have that discussion. Start bringing up the cases in question and we can go through them. What are the details?UNI88 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 9:01 am
I think it's fair to question SCOTUS:
It seems that they are overturning a larger percentage of lower court rulings unfavorable to the current administration than previously. Why is that? Are the lower courts misinterpreting the law? Or is SCOTUS?
Why they're using shadow docket rulings more than in the past. Those have little to no explanation of why and they give the trump regime a lot of leeway to to continue their modus operandi while the case continues.
- Changing equitable doctrine without strong historical support (trump vs CASA)?
- Narrowing old precedent without forthrightly overruling it?
- Treating similar plaintiffs differently depending on subject matter?
- Applying the same scrutiny to executive power now as it did in previous administrations?
On the shadow docket:
Supreme Court Shadow Docket Tracker — Challenges to Trump Administration Actions
The Trump administration has prevailed in the vast majority of its requests for emergency action, as the data below shows. These rulings have allowed administration policies to move forward after lower courts had found that the administration’s actions were likely illegal. While the Court’s shadow docket decisions are not a final ruling on the legal merits, there is still significant impact on the people affected while the case remains pending, which is why the lower courts had issued their orders in the first place. Among other things, the Court’s shadow docket rulings have led to mass firings of civil servants, the defunding of scientific research, and racial profiling in immigration sweeps.
The lack of reasoning in most shadow docket rulings also leaves lower courts with little guidance about how to address similar issues in other cases.
A clear pattern has emerged: The Court is using the shadow docket to quickly and dramatically expand executive power. As Justice Elena Kagan wrote in a dissent, “Our emergency docket should never be used, as it has been this year, to permit what our own precedent bars. Still more, it should not be used, as it also has been, to transfer government authority from Congress to the President, and thus to reshape the Nation’s separation of powers.”
...
Since January 20, 2025, the Supreme Court has issued 25 decisions on the shadow docket concerning administration actions.Two shadow docket applications are currently pending.
- 20 ruled for the administration at least partially
- 5 ruled against the administration
- 7 were not accompanied by any written explanation (most other rulings included only brief analysis, sometimes as short as a sentence)






