It is still (very) early in the Supreme Court’s new term, and its calendar is far from full. The justices and their law clerks will consider thousands more requests for review and, notwithstanding the recent trend of declining caseloads, will probably grant a few dozen more. That said, and unlike the last few years, it does not appear that the story of what court-watchers call October Term 2025 will feature landmark, lead-the-news religious-freedom controversies. In fact, so far, there is only one church-state case, Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections and Public Safety, which is set for oral argument next month.
The Wrongheaded Religious Freedom Narrative
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It is still (very) early in the Supreme Court’s new term, and its calendar is far from full. The justices and their law clerks will consider thousands more requests for review and, notwithstanding the recent trend of declining caseloads, will probably grant a few dozen more. That said, and unlike the last few years, it does not appear that the story of what court-watchers call October Term 2025 will feature landmark, lead-the-news religious-freedom controversies. In fact, so far, there is only one church-state case, Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections and Public Safety, which is set for oral argument next month.
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