2026-06-23T21:24:41.463Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/23/politics/6-3-supreme-court
当地时间周二,美国最高法院迎来一个不祥的里程碑:在本月底前全力审结最具争议的待审案件之际,该院今年以意识形态划线作出的6比3裁决数量,已经超过了去年整个任期的总数。
在唐纳德·特朗普总统第二任期内充满火药味的政治氛围中,同时承受着来自左右两派的尖锐批评,最高法院在今年的七起判决中已经分裂为保守派和自由派阵营——比去年全年还多一起——而相关重大案件还包括总统权力和跨性别权利议题。
其中一些判决同样可能引发法院的意识形态分裂,例如特朗普是否有权解雇联邦独立机构(如联邦贸易委员会)官员的相关案件。大法官们预计将于周四公布下一批判决意见。
周二公布的五起判决中有四起以6比3作出。其中包括一起裁定禁止一名拉斯塔法里教徒起诉监狱官员的案件——狱警剪掉他的长发绺违反了联邦法律,以及一起允许埃克森美孚就1960年古巴政府没收的财产提起诉讼的判决。
本届任期迄今最具影响力的6比3裁决,是最高法院4月份作出的削弱《选举权法案》在选区重划争议中效力的裁定。该判决以及随后的几起类似裁决,帮助共和党迅速重新划分了路易斯安那州和阿拉巴马州等南部州的国会选区,为共和党在今年的中期选举中争取优势。
而上述统计并未将法院紧急议程上的裁决包括在内,在这类案件中,自由派和保守派阵营的分裂更为频繁。
“最高法院倾向于以6比3的党派划线方式裁决重要案件,这对法院的公信力是一个严重问题,”乔治城大学法学院教授戴维·科尔说道。他曾担任美国公民自由联盟法律总监,多次在最高法院出庭辩护。“大法官们本应受法律而非政治指引。”
“即便许多分歧反映的是法律世界观的差异,而非政治分歧,他们以党派划线分裂的次数越多,法院作为一个机构的公信力就越低,”科尔说道。
诚然,本届任期内的一些最重要案件曾让自由派和保守派大法官站在同一阵线。今年2月,最高法院裁定特朗普全面全球关税政策无效,该案的多数意见中包括三名保守派大法官和三名自由派大法官。上周,最高法院一致裁定,仅因一名德克萨斯州男子经常吸食大麻,政府就剥夺其持枪权的做法违反了第二修正案。
但6比3的意识形态分裂判决数量,经常被法院的批评者和支持者拿来作为各自的论据,双方都试图在就法院如何解决政治敏感议题的批评进行攻防时,塑造法院的走向。大法官们 themselves often brush aside the 6-3 outcomes and point out the large share of cases that are decided unanimously, even though those usually involve more technical questions with far less reach.
“这困扰着我,因为这种说法并不准确,”保守派大法官艾米·康尼·巴雷特上个月在乔治·W·布什总统图书馆活动中谈到外界对6比3判决的关注时说道。巴雷特表示,压倒性多数的一致裁决比例“并非媒体所描绘的叙事”。
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上个月在里根图书馆发表演讲时,大法官尼尔·戈萨奇也表达了类似观点。
“9名由5位不同总统在30年间从全美各地任命的老人,我们能够以一致意见解决下级法院存在分歧的案件,比例达到40%,”戈萨奇说道,他是特朗普提名的首位最高法院大法官。“我认为这是了不起的成就。”
截至目前,最高法院今年已经对46起案件中的超过一半作出了一致裁决,这一比例比去年6月底时略高。但在任期最后几天公布的最重大、最复杂的裁决很少是一致通过的。今年还有十几起案件等待裁决,一致裁决的比例可能会大幅下降。
根据SCOTUSblog汇编的数据,2020年至2024年间,最高法院近14%的实体判决是以意识形态划线作出的分裂裁决。
甚至在法院进入最后一个月的审理期之前,大法官们就已经越来越多地以书面意见和公开场合的方式互相抨击——尤其是在选区重划案件中的角色问题上。
“法院是不涉及政治的,”最高法院最年轻的大法官、自由派的凯坦吉·布朗·杰克逊上个月说道。“我们必须严格恪守在每起案件中适用的原则和规则,不能让人看起来在这类案件中采取了双重标准。”
杰克逊的观点呼应了她几天前在一起涉及路易斯安那州快速重划国会选区能力的紧急议程案件中撰写的异议意见。保守派大法官塞缪尔·阿利托在一份简短的协同意见中回应称,杰克逊的观点“充其量是微不足道的”,“毫无根据且带有侮辱性”。
“法院违反了什么原则?”阿利托写道。“是我们永远不应采取任何可能被不公正地批评为党派行为的原则吗?”
除了周二有关宗教信仰和埃克森美孚起诉古巴实体的裁决外,法院还以6比3的投票结果作出了一项判决,将使政府更容易驱逐因特定罪名被定罪的绿卡持有者。法院还在一项判决中以意识形态划线作出了实质性裁决,该判决驳回了法轮功宗教运动成员对思科的诉讼——他们称思科向中国政府出售的设备帮助和教唆了对该组织成员的酷刑。
未来一周,最高法院预计将就特朗普试图终结延续一个多世纪以来的出生公民权原则作出裁决,以及总统解雇美联储主席丽莎·库克的相关争议。根据口头辩论情况,这些判决的多数意见可能会有一些保守派和自由派大法官共同参与。
但仍有待裁决的案件还包括:总统解雇其他独立机构负责人的权力、在边境驱逐寻求庇护者,以及取消对海地和叙利亚国民的临时驱逐保护令。最高法院正在审理一起重要的第二修正案案件,涉及夏威夷一项限制人们在零售商店等对公众开放的私人场所携带枪支的法律。
此外,法院还在审理西弗吉尼亚州和爱达荷州颁布的两项法案,这些法案禁止跨性别女孩参加女子运动队。
所有这些案件都有可能以6比3的结果分裂最高法院。
It’s a 6-3 Supreme Court: Ideological splits mount ahead of major end-of-term rulings
2026-06-23T21:24:41.463Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/23/politics/6-3-supreme-court
The Supreme Court hit an inauspicious milestone Tuesday as it raced to finish its most divisive pending cases by the end of the month: It has already handed down more 6-3 decisions along ideological lines than it did for the entire term that ended last year.
As it navigates a charged political atmosphere during President Donald Trump’s second term and endures sharp criticism from the left and right, the court has already split into conservative and liberal camps in seven decisions this year — one more than last year — before it even gets to major cases on presidential power and transgender rights.
Some of those decisions, including on whether Trump may fire officials at independent federal agencies like the Federal Trade Commission, may also divide the court along ideological lines. The justices are scheduled to drop their next batch of opinions on Thursday.
Four of the five decisions the court released Tuesday were 6-3.Those included a ruling that barred a Rastafarian man from suing prison officials who violated a federal law when they cut his dreadlocks and a decision that permitted Exxon to sue over property confiscated by the Cuban government in 1960.
The most significant 6-3 decision so far this term was the court’s April ruling that gutted the Voting Rights Act’s power over redistricting disputes. The decision, and several that followed from it, helped Republicans quickly redraw congressional district in Southern states like Louisiana and Alabama to give the GOP an advantage in this year’s midterm elections.
And those numbers do not take into account rulings on the court’s emergency docket, where the liberal and conservative wings have split more frequently.
“The court’s tendency to decide important cases along 6-3 partisan lines is a serious problem for the court’s legitimacy,” said David Cole, a Georgetown Law professor who frequently argued before the court as the legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union. “The justices are supposed to be guided by law, not politics.”
“Even if many divides reflect differences in legal worldview, not politics, the more they divide along party lines, the less credibility the court has as an institution,” Cole said.
To be sure, some of the most important cases this term have brought liberal and conservative justices together. The court’s decision in February to invalidate Trump’s sweeping global tariffs counted three conservatives and three liberals in the majority. Last week, the court unanimously decided that the Second Amendment barred the government from disarming a Texas man just because he frequently smokes pot.
But the number of 6-3 ideological decisions is often trotted out by the court’s critics and its supporters as both attempt to frame the court’s direction as they lodge and parry criticism of how the court is resolving politically fraught issues.The justices themselves will often brush aside the 6-3 outcomes and point out the large share of cases that are decided unanimously, even though those usually involve more technical questions with far less reach.
“It bothers me because it’s not accurate,” Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a conservative, said last month at the George W. Bush Presidential Center of the focus on 6-3 decisions. The far higher share of opinions that are decided unanimously, Barrett said, “is not the narrative that’s portrayed in the media.”
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Speaking at the Reagan Library last month, Justice Neil Gorsuch made a similar point.
“Nine old people appointed by five different presidents over the course of 30 years from all around the country, and we are able to resolve cases lower courts disagreed on unanimously 40% of the time,” said Gorsuch, who was Trump’s first nominee to the high court. “I think that’s something.”
The high court has decided more than half of its 46 decisions so far this term unanimously, a slightly higher share than last year by the end of June. But the biggest and most complicated decisions delivered in the final days of a term are rarely unanimous. With a dozen cases still waiting for a ruling this year, the share of unanimous cases will likely plummet.
From 2020 to 2024, nearly 14% of the court’s merits decisions were split along ideological lines, according to data compiled by SCOTUSblog.
Even before the court turned toward its final month, the justices increasingly were sniping at one another — in written opinions and in public — over their role in the redistricting cases.
“Courts are apolitical,” liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the court’s most junior justice, said last month. “We have to be scrupulous about sticking to the principles and the rules that we apply in every case and not look as though we’re doing something different in this kind of context.”
Jackson’s point echoed a dissent she wrote in an emergency docket case days earlier involving Louisiana’s ability to quickly redraw its congressional districts. Justice Samuel Alito, a member of the court’s conservative wing, responded in a brief concurring opinion by describing Jackson’s points as “trivial at best” and “baseless and insulting.”
“What principle has the court violated?” Alito wrote. “The principle that we should never take any action that might unjustifiably be criticized as partisan?”
In addition to the decisions Tuesday on religion and Exxon’s ability to sue Cuban entities, the court split 6-3 in a decision that will make it easier for the government to deport green card holders who are convicted of certain crimes. It also split along ideological lines on the most substantial holding of a decision that blocks members of the Falun Gong religious movement from suing Cisco for selling equipment to the Chinese government they said aided and abetted the group’s torture.
Over the next week, the court is expected to rule on Trump’s effort to end birthright citizenship as it has been understood for more than a century as well as the president’s attempt to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. Based on the oral arguments, those decisions may well wind up with some conservatives and liberals together in the majority.
But also pending are cases dealing with the president’s power to fire the leaders of other independent agencies, turn away asylum seekers at the border and cancel temporary deportation protections for Haitian and Syrian nationals. The court is considering an important Second Amendment case over a Hawaii law that makes it harder to carry guns into private property open to the public, like retail stores.
And it is weighing two cases dealing with laws enacted by West Virginia and Idaho that ban transgender girls from competing on girls’ sports teams.
All of those are candidates for splitting the court 6-3.
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