January Mega Preview Episode -  Transgender Sports, Gun Rights, and Fed Firings
January Mega Preview Episode - Transgender Sports, Gun Rights, and Fed Firings  
Podcast: SCOTUS Oral Arguments and Opinions
Published On: Fri Jan 09 2026
Description: Based on the project templates and your episode script, here are show notes for your January 2026 mega episode:January 2026 Supreme Court Mega Preview | The High Court ReportOverview: Action-packed January brings constitutional showdowns across five major cases spanning wartime contractor protection, transgender athletics, sovereign immunity, Second Amendment property rights, and presidential removal power over Federal Reserve governors.Roadmap Episode: Complete preview covering Chevron's $744 million WWII liability case, transgender sports restrictions post-Skrmetti, New Jersey Transit sovereignty claims, Hawaii's gun permission requirements after Bruen, and Trump's authority to fire Fed officials for pre-appointment conduct.Case Summaries:Chevron v. Plaquemines (Jan 12): WWII oil companies face massive state court verdict for 1940s production methods.Little v. Hecox (Jan 13): Transgender female students challenge Idaho and West Virginia sports participation bans.CSX Galette v. NJ Transit (Jan 14): Transit authority claims sovereign immunity despite state disclaimer of responsibility.Wolford v. Lopez (Jan 20): Licensed gun carriers sue Hawaii over business entry permission requirements.Trump v. Cook (Jan 21): Presidential firing of Fed Governor Lisa Cook over mortgage application allegations.Key Themes:Federalism tensions across multiple casesPost-Bruen Second Amendment applicationsSovereign immunity doctrine evolutionPresidential removal authority limitsConstitutional gender classifications after SkrmettiStatistics:Supreme Court currently reviewing 48 unique pending cases63 cases heard last term, suggesting 10-15 more additions likelyFourth sovereign immunity case this termBenjamin Aguinaga and Paul Clement each arguing third cases this yearSchedule Notes:January arguments followed by February hiatus until month-endOnly three sitting days in entire FebruaryEight March days and seven April sitting days plannedMay-June dates not yet setFollow The High Court Report:Apple, Spotify, YouTube podcastsLinkedIn for daily updatesEmail: scotus.cases.pod@gmail.comIndividual case previews available on podcast pageLink8/19/25 Episode: Road Work Ahead: