The decisions carry immediate practical consequences. The removal provision ruling overturned the 91-year-old Humphrey's Executor precedent and directly enables the president to remove Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook and reshape multi-member agencies without congressional constraint. The Court also upheld Mississippi's mail-in ballot rule allowing ballots postmarked by Election Day to arrive up to five days later—a setback for Republican litigation efforts ahead of the 2026 midterms. The birthright citizenship ruling, authored by Chief Justice John Roberts, signals rare ideological crosscutting on the bench. Four cases remain pending as the term concludes.
Attorneys should monitor the downstream effects of the removal provision ruling on independent agency enforcement, particularly at the FTC and Federal Election Commission. The birthright citizenship decision will likely trigger state-level litigation over implementation and may affect immigration enforcement priorities. The geofence warrant ruling creates new Fourth Amendment constraints on law enforcement location tracking. These decisions collectively represent a pivot toward executive power consolidation paired with selective civil rights protections—a tension that will generate substantial litigation as agencies and states adapt to the new legal landscape.