The Supreme Court is done hearing argument for October, but that does not mean itâs done making major rulings. There are several applications awaiting action on the courtâs interim docket, including the Trump administrationâs request to be allowed to federalize and deploy the National Guard within Illinois and its attempt to change the current rules for sex markers on passports. Â
In the past two weeks, the justices resolved six pending cases, denying three requests for stays of execution from death-row inmates, a manâs request for an injunction preventing a Michigan county from enforcing against him a law on making terrorist threats, a request to require a California school district to offer faith-based opt-outs from vaccine requirements, and Alex Jonesâ request for the court to pause a $1.4 billion judgment he has been ordered to pay in a defamation case brought by the parents of children who died in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.
In addition to two requests for a stay of execution from the same man, four other significant cases remain, although only three likely will be resolved in the near future. (The court announced earlier this month that it will hear oral arguments in January on the fourth, which concerns President Donald Trumpâs firing of Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook.)
Hereâs a brief overview of the four pending applications.
National Guard in Illinois
The newest application, in Trump v. Illinois, was filed by the administration on Friday and centers on Trumpâs effort to deploy the National Guard to Illinois. Specifically, U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer urged the court to pause a district court order prohibiting the National Guardâs deployment. According to Sauer, the order âcause[s] irreparable harm to the Executive Branch by countermanding the Presidentâs authority as Commander in Chief, jeopardizing the lives and safety of DHS officers, and preventing the President and the Secretary of War from taking reasonable and lawful measures to protect federal personnel from the violent resistance that has persisted in the Chicago area for several months.â
In an opinion which followed her issuance of the challenged order on Oct. 9, U.S. District Judge April Perry contended that â[r]esort to the military to execute the lawsâ was not presently âcalled for.â She noted that although she did ânot doubt that there have been acts of vandalism, civil disobedience, and even assaults on federal agents,â she did not believe there was enough justification presented for the administrationâs actions.
Perry initially blocked deployment for two weeks, until Thursday, Oct. 23. On Wednesday, with the agreement of both sides, she extended her order until final judgment on the merits.
Although the application in Trump v. Illinois is the newest, it may be addressed first. The state of Illinois and city of Chicago responded to the Trump administrationâs request on Monday â just over 72 hours after the request was filed â and the administration filed its reply brief on Tuesday.
Hague Convention case
Castro v. Guevara centers on a 7-year-old girl in Dallas, Texas, who soon may be forced to return to her birth country of Venezuela. Her mother, Samantha Estefania Francisco Castro, who lives with her in Dallas, has asked the court to pause a ruling from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit that would require that return.
Castro and her daughter have been in the United States since 2021 and have pending asylum applications. The dispute began in April 2023, when Jose Leonardo Brito Guevara, the girlâs father, who has lived in Spain for the past four years, âpetitioned a federal court under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction ⦠to obtain the immediate return of [the girl] to Venezuela.â A federal district court denied the petition after determining that the girl is âwell settled in her new environment in Texas.â But the 5th Circuit reversed.
With her application to the Supreme Court, Castro is seeking to block the 5th Circuitâs decision from taking effect. On Oct. 2, one day after Castro sought relief, Justice Samuel Alito granted her request for an immediate administrative stay, enabling the girl to remain in the U.S. while the court considers her case.
In his own brief, the girlâs father explained that his move to Spain was never meant to be permanent and that his mother was caring for the girl when Castro âabscondedâ with her to the U.S. He said he has been working to promote her return to Venezuela since he learned that Castro had left the country with her.Â
Sex markers on passports
In Trump v. Orr, the Trump administration has asked the court to allow it to implement its directives for sex designations on passports. The Biden administration put in place a policy that applicants could receive passports reflecting the sex designation of their choice without providing medical paperwork. The Trump administration seeks to instead classify people based on their âimmutable biological classification as either male or femaleâ as part of carrying out an executive order on gender identity.
A group of transgender and nonbinary Americans sued to block this change to passport rules, contending that the Trump administration was violating their rights to equal treatment under the Constitution and a federal law governing administrative agencies. They also said the new rules violated their rights to international travel and informational privacy.
In April, U.S. District Judge Julia Kobick issued an order barring the government from enforcing its passport policy against all but one of the plaintiffs (she determined that plaintiff did not need such protection because his passport would not expire until 2028). About two months later, the district court issued a broader order that prohibited the Trump administration from enforcing its policy against any transgender or nonbinary person who had applied or would apply for a passport consistent with their gender identity.
Sauer came to the Supreme Court on Sept. 19 and urged the justices to put Kobickâs order on hold. He wrote that the ruling âinjures the United States by compelling it to speak to foreign governments in contravention of both the Presidentâs foreign policy and scientific reality.â
The transgender and nonbinary litigants challenged that characterization of whatâs at stake in their own filing on Oct. 6. â[T]he government has never explained how passport sex markers that align with gender identity, including the sex the person lives as and outwardly expresses, could possibly affect foreign relationsâwhen the challenged policy undermines the very purpose of passports as identity documents that officials check against the bearerâs appearance,â the brief said.
This case has been fully briefed for more than two weeks, which means the courtâs decision could come any day.
Lisa Cookâs firing
As noted above, Trump v. Cook stands out from the other pending applications because the justices have made it clear they wonât take action until they hear argument on Cookâs removal in January. Cook will continue serving on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors at least until then.
This case, like others this year on the National Labor Relations Board, Merit Systems Protection Board, and Federal Trade Commission, addresses Trumpâs power to remove the heads of independent federal agencies created by Congress. Under federal law, presidents can only remove Federal Reserve governors âfor cause.â
Trump attempted to fire Cook in late August, citing allegations that she had committed mortgage fraud. (Cook has denied those allegations.) Cook challenged her firing in federal court, where she secured an order allowing her to remain on the Fed board while the lawsuit continues. U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb held that the mortgage fraud allegations likely do not satisfy the âfor causeâ requirement because the alleged fraud took place before Cook was nominated to the Fed board by former President Joe Biden. She also argued that the firing likely violated Cookâs rights under the Fifth Amendmentâs due process clause, because Cook had a property interest in her position, and as a result, she was entitled to notice and an opportunity to be heard before removal.
The Trump administration appealed Cobbâs order to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, which left it in place by a vote of 2-1. The majority echoed Cobbâs concerns about Cookâs due process rights, holding that because that claim âis very likely meritorious,â it did not need to weigh in on the question of whether Cookâs firing satisfied the âfor causeâ requirement.
In mid-September, Sauer asked the Supreme Court to clear the way for Trump to fire Cook. He wrote that Cobb did not have the power to order Trump to reinstate Cook and described her order as âyet another case of improper judicial interference with the Presidentâs removal authority.â
In her own filing, Cook urged the court to allow her to continue serving. She contended that allowing Trump to fire her âwould upend the Federal Reserveâs longstanding tradition of independence.â
On Wednesday, Oct. 1, the justices announced that they would hear oral arguments in January on the Trump administrationâs request.
The interim docket never sleeps
Court watchers have observed that the justices didnât have much of a summer recess this year because they had several interim docket matters to address from July through September. Perhaps it shouldnât be surprising, then, that the interim docket remains busy now that the court is back in session. However, it is quite possible that the justices will resolve several of the pending requests before theyâre back in the courtroom for arguments on Monday, Nov. 3.





