The Supreme Court recently upped the stakes for its next term by further calling into question the vitality of the Voting Rights Act.
The crucial future of voting rights is just one of the important issues set for resolution in the term that starts in October, with decisions expected by July. Though the justices have still been ruling on the so-called shadow docket over the summer, and they’ll add more cases to the docket on a rolling basis, here are five big ones already set for resolution this coming term.
While we never know exactly how the justices will rule until the opinions come out, they have laid the groundwork for another set of conservative victories.
Voting rights
Louisiana v. Callais was supposed to be decided last term. But the justices failed to rule and instead pushed it to the coming term. Notably, they added significance to an already significant redistricting appeal when they issued an order last week that set the stage for additional gutting of the landmark 1965 law on voting rights.
Transgender sports
One of the biggest cases this past term was United States v. Skrmetti, in which the Republican-appointed majority upheld a ban on gender-affirming care for minors. Fresh off that ruling, the justices agreed to consider whether transgender girls and women can participate in sports on girls’ and women’s teams. That sets up the possibility of two rulings against transgender people two terms in a row.
Campaign finance
Yet another hot-button issue that could further conservative interests is campaign finance. The justices agreed to hear an appeal from Republicans challenging campaign finance restrictions. The appeal came from the National Republican Senatorial Committee and others affiliated with the GOP, with support from the Trump administration.
Conversion therapy
The campaign finance case isn’t the only appeal claiming First Amendment interests that align with conservative goals. Challenging Colorado’s ban on so-called conversion therapy — attempting to change a minor’s sexual orientation or gender identity — a Christian counselor brought the following legal issue to the justices, which they agreed to consider: “Whether a law that censors certain conversations between counselors and their clients based on the viewpoints expressed regulates conduct or violates the Free Speech Clause.”
Abortion
The court that overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022 is also hearing an abortion-related appeal. It’s not directly about access to the procedure, but rather is another First Amendment challenge.








