The U.S. Supreme Court has faced numerous challenges to Biden administration policies this summer.

Bloomberg Law reported that the court has decided on 10 emergency applications since July 1, and that number could more than triple by the start of the court’s new term in October. 

“In the summer of 2020, when there were emergencies everywhere, the full court decided a total of 21 emergency applications,” Georgetown Law professor Steve Vladeck told Bloomberg Law. “We’re at the halfway point and when they’re done with the current batch, they’re going to be well past that. This is going to blow previous summers out of the water, including the Covid summer.” 

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Politico reports on how recent Supreme Court decisions are now bringing Biden administration policies under heavy fire. Here’s the start of the story:

President Joe Biden executed one of the most sweeping progressive agendas on labor, climate change and “corporate greed” in recent decades — only to see the Supreme Court lay it so bare that a Kamala Harris victory may not protect large chunks of it.

A suite of Supreme Court rulings this summer freed up federal judges to freeze many regulations the president once campaigned on or enacted to get around a deeply divided Congress. In Texas, a federal judge blocked Biden’s ban on noncompete agreements for workers, and a judge in Mississippi stopped his discrimination protections in health care for transgender people. And an Ohio-based appeals court temporarily halted a policy preventing internet companies from throttling service.

Biden appointees have spent years writing rules to crack down on credit card late fees, require airlines to fork over cash refunds and make millions more people eligible for overtime pay while reining in polluting industries. But the future of those policies, along with the president’s unfinished business on student debt relief and artificial intelligence, are far less secure than they were just two months ago.

While having a successor from the same party long served as the simplest way for presidents to protect and continue their legacies, the high court has made it harder for Harris to defend Biden’s even if she bests former President Donald Trump. The court rulings, particularly one overturning the “Chevron doctrine,” now make it more difficult for Harris to secure her own agenda — or even, in some cases, for Trump to cement his.