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Chimera readability score 63 out of 100, Academic reading level.

The Supreme Court spent its just-completed term sidelining Congress and amassing power for the ascendant branches of government: the presidency and the court itself.
Why it matters: As the court strips Congress of its power, decisions over people's money, jobs, votes and health shift toward the president and nine justices appointed for life.
The big picture: For decades, conservative lawyers have argued the Constitution grants all executive power to one person: the president.
The theory, called the unitary executive, holds that no one who enforces federal law is independent of the president. This term, it won out again and again.
Between the lines: The justices overturned precedents, second-guessed Congress, brushed aside facts found by lower courts and applied textualism in ways even some adherents questioned.
The result is a court increasingly willing to cast off constraints.
Take the Federal Trade Commission case. In Trump v. Slaughter, they chose which parts of the FTC to keep (the powers Congress gave it) and which to shed (the independence Congress designed).
"The Roberts Court has adopted for itself a line-item veto," Boston University legal historian Jed Shugerman, a well-known critic of unitary executive theory, tells Axios. It keeps the parts of a law it likes and tosses the rest.
Zoom in: The court made it nearly impossible to use the Voting Rights Act to challenge maps that dilute Black and Latino voting power.
It struck down limits on coordinated political party spending that the court had upheld in 2001.
It curbed Congress' power to make state officials pay damages when they violate federal funding laws, in a case brought by a Rastafarian inmate whose head prison guards forcibly shaved.
The court also allowed the president to keep withholding $4 billion in congressionally-appropriated foreign aid, at least for now — a move critics said encroached on Congress' most fundamental power, the purse.
"The real headline of the current term is 'Supreme Court rules for itself, 6–3,'" Georgetown Law professor Steve Vladeck tells Axios, even if it comes at the expense of Congress, lower courts, and, "every once in a while," President Trump.
More and more of the court's power now flows through its so-calledshadow docket, in which cases skip full briefing and argument, and orders arrive fast, unsigned and often unexplained.
There, the justices have refereed Trump's most contested moves: immigration crackdowns, frozen foreign aid, mass firings of federal workers, changes to voting maps, transgender passport restrictions and more.
Reality check: The president didn't win everything.
Chief Justice John Roberts wrote all three major rulings against Trump: blocking emergency tariffs, sparing Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook for now, and rejecting his order to end birthright citizenship.
The court reached for whatever legal philosophy delivered the result it wanted, Shugerman says.
To end the FTC's independence, the court invoked a rigid rule: the president controls the executive branch. To spare the Fed's autonomy the same day, it carved out an exception that Justices Clarence Thomas and Amy Coney Barrett rejected as an unprincipled "contradiction."
Race was a constitutional problem when Louisiana relied on it to protect Black voting power. But allegations that racial animus motivated the Trump administration's decision to end protections for Haitian immigrants didn't stop the court from green-lighting the policy.
"Some days the court is originalist, and other days it's not," Vladeck says. The justices, he says, use history and text "the way a drunk uses a lamppost: for support, not for illumination."
Yes, but: Trump's biggest defeat doubled as the term's loudest warning.
On birthright citizenship, four justices were willing to say Trump's order didn't violate the 14th Amendment.
The fact that a position deemed "outlandish as recently as a decade ago got four votes," Vladeck says, will "embolden" the next wave of once-fringe constitutional arguments.
The bottom line: Congress grows weaker every year, the executive branch gets stronger, and everyone waits to hear from the strongest branch of all: the Supreme Court.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text exhibits strong, nuanced argumentation and specific detail, indicating it is likely human-written analysis rather than generic synthetic content.

Signals Detected
low severity: Erratic sentence length variance and varied pacing; use of embedded citations (e.g., 'it won out again and again') suggests human rhetorical rhythm rather than metronomic uniformity.
low severity: Presence of idiosyncratic emphasis ('The real headline...') and a consistent argumentative trajectory that incorporates specific, slightly tangential examples (Rastafarian inmate, foreign aid) which suggest human narrative intent.
low severity: Effective use of named sources (Shugerman, Vladeck) woven into the argument, rather than mere generic attribution ('experts say'), indicating integration with specific journalistic context.
low severity: Claims are highly specific and rooted in established legal/historical concepts (unitary executive theory, line-item veto) coupled with detailed examples. The flow of the argument relies on connecting these dots rather than pure LLM recitation.
Human Indicators
The integration of highly specific and somewhat tangential case details (e.g., the Rastafarian inmate, specific names of justices blocking action) points toward a human author grounding the abstract theory in detailed legal reality.
The tonal shifts—moving from broad theoretical statements to specific, emotionally charged consequences—show a pattern of deliberate rhetorical construction.