The Supreme Court sided with religious groups Thursday in an emergency appeal that alleged New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's COVID-related worship restrictions discriminate against Jews and violate the First Amendment. Via @KevinDaleyDC
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo responded Thursday to the Supreme Court's Wednesday night ruling, saying the decision hasn't changed anything and called the court's action "irrelevant from any practical impact.”
Editorial: Of prayers and plagues: What the Supreme Court got wrong about Gov. Cuomo’s COVID restrictions #USNews
Gov. Cuomo accused the U.S. Supreme Court of political partisanship after it rejected his coronavirus restrictions on religious services. He suggested the 5-to-4 decision was a reflection of the court’s new conservative majority.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo responded Thursday to the Supreme Court's overnight ruling against New York's coronavirus restrictions on houses of worship, calling the ruling "irrelevant from any practical impact."
In a 5-4 ruling, the Supreme Court sided with religious organizations in a dispute over restrictions put in place by NY Gov. Cuomo. “We're not looking for absolutely freedom to do whatever we want … We want to follow the guidelines, and we have,” Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio says.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo accused the U.S. Supreme Court of political partisanship after the justices narrowly rejected his COVID-19-based restrictions on religious services.
Loading
Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York accused the U.S. Supreme Court of political partisanship after it rejected his coronavirus restrictions on religious services. He suggested the 5-to-4 decision was a reflection of the court’s new conservative majority.
In a 5-4 ruling, the Supreme Court sided with religious organizations in a dispute over Covid-19 restrictions put in place by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo that limited attendance at religious services.
Just before midnight on the night before Thanksgiving, the Supreme Court blocked New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo from enforcing attendance limits at religious services. The vote is 5-4, with Roberts and the three liberals dissenting. Here is the ruling:
Trump lauds Supreme Court decision on Gov. Cuomo in Thanksgiving message
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that the state would convene a commission to select an artist to fashion a statue of Supreme Court Justice RuthBader Ginsburg to be erected in Brooklyn, where she was born
NEW: Supreme Court Justice RuthBader Ginsburg will be honored with a statue in Brooklyn, where she was born in 1933, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced, one day after Ginsburg's death.
NEW: Supreme Court Justice RuthBader Ginsburg will be honored with a statue in Brooklyn, where she was born in 1933, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced, one day after Ginsburg's death.
#BREAKING: Gov. Cuomo says he'll sue if the Supreme Court acts to roll back Roe v. Wade
NY Gov. Cuomo orders spire of One World Trade Center to be lit in rainbow colors Sunday in honor of Supreme Court ruling and NYC Pride Week.
Loading