The court on Friday issued decisions on the final six cases that were left on its docket for the summer, including emergency appeals relating to Trump's agenda.
A divided Supreme Court ruled that individual judges lack the authority to grant nationwide injunctions, but the decision left unclear the fate of President Donald Trump 's restrictions on birthright citizenship.
The court sided with Maryland parents with religious objections to school book material, preserved a key part of an Obamacare coverage requirement, upheld a law aimed at blocking kids from seeing pornography online and preserved a fee subsidizing phone and internet services in schools, libraries and rural areas.
Here's the latest:
Advocacy group warns of possible Social Security number impacts after court's ruling
Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works, an advocacy group for the preservation of Social Security benefits, said the court's ruling could open the door to the agency ending its enumeration at birth program.
Virtually all babies born in the U.S. are automatically given a Social Security number.
''If there are new injunctions or in the unlikely event that injunctions get lifted, SSA has to change its procedures,'' she said, referring to the Social Security Administration.