The U.S. Supreme Court appears poised to rule in favor of an Ohio woman who claims she was discriminated against at her workplace due to her sexual orientation. The case, Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services, centers on allegations of reverse discrimination because the plaintiff is straight. During oral arguments, the justices, with a 6-3 conservative majority, seemed inclined to support the woman's claim. A favorable ruling could potentially ease the path for non-minorities to pursue claims of illegal bias, according to conservative groups like America First Legal.
Supreme Court Update: Lackey v. Stinnie (No. 23-621) https://t.co/t1DzYfdajo #Litigation #Federal #Drivers @WigginandDana https://t.co/AlqQhQWUoe
A year after the US Supreme Court banned race-based admissions, Harvard Law School's first-year Black student enrollment has plummeted — with repercussions beyond the classroom. Read The Big Take ⤵️ https://t.co/vJFCQCfJNv
A year after the US Supreme Court banned race-based admissions, Harvard Law School's first-year Black student enrollment has plummeted — with repercussions beyond the classroom https://t.co/NFcH82Gem9