The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in four major cases during the week of January 12, 2026, covering federal contractor jurisdiction, transgender athletics rights, and state agency immunity.
The Court issued its first four opinions of the term while demonstrating reluctance to expand constitutional protections in sensitive areas like transgender rights and police emergency powers.
Justice concerns about nationwide chaos and disruption emerged as recurring themes across multiple cases involving federalism and state authority questions.
Chevron Corporation v. Plaquemines Parish
Question Presented: Whether federal contractor removal statute permits federal jurisdiction for conduct "relating to" government contracts
Overview: Louisiana oil dumping lawsuit raises federalism questions about protecting contractors from local bias versus state court expertise.
Main Analysis:
- Paul Clement invoked Daniel Webster's 1812 commentary about federal courts protecting nationally important projects from local prejudice
- Chevron fears massive verdict after Louisiana secured $744 million judgment in similar WWII oil case
- Chief Justice Roberts expressed "butterfly effect" concerns about sweeping federal jurisdiction for paper clip contractors
- Both sides conceded Fifth Circuit test failed to follow statutory text
Prediction: Victory for Chevron or remand for different legal test application. Court disliked Fifth Circuit approach.
Key Tension: Federal protection from local bias versus state expertise in Louisiana environmental law
Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J.
Question Presented: Whether Title IX permits excluding transgender students from gender-aligned athletics
Overview: Parallel cases create constitutional clash over state biological sex requirements versus federal anti-discrimination protections.
Main Analysis:
- Majority seemed disinclined to draw constitutional lines protecting transgender people
- Government's contradictory positions caught justices' attention - supports state biological sex requirements while challenging California's opposing law
- Follows Skrmetti decision recognizing broad state authority over transgender issues
- No appetite for constitutional intervention when states actively disagree
Prediction: Idaho and West Virginia victory. Court reluctant to wade into transgender debates.
Key Insight: Next frontier involves legitimacy of state laws protecting transgender status
CSX Galette v. NJ Transit Corp.
Question Presented: Whether state-created corporations retain sovereign immunity despite corporate structure
Overview: Transit authority immunity dispute affects numerous state agencies using corporate structures.
Main Analysis:
- Court focused intensely on formality versus functionality question
- Justice Kavanaugh expressed "chaos" concerns about jeopardizing state corporations nationwide
- Conservative justices seemed reluctant to depart from 1980s D.C. Circuit precedent written by Judge Bork and joined by Justice Scalia
- Governor maintains absolute veto power over every board action despite corporate structure
Prediction: New Jersey Transit Corporation victory based on formality precedent and chaos avoidance
Key Factor: Risk of nationwide disruption to state transit authorities and similar agencies