Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.
The Supreme Court is heading into the final weeks of its term with major rulings still to come.
NPR's Carrie Johnson reports the justices are expected to decide nearly two dozen cases,
including a challenge to President Trump's order on birthright citizenship.
The biggest case of this term and the one that's most important to President Trump involves immigration,
specifically that executive order he signed on day one after he returned to the White House.
That order would strip the guarantee of birthright citizenship to babies born on American soil.
For more than a century, people have understood the 14th Amendment to ensure all persons born here are Americans.
At oral argument, the Trump administration had a rough go of things.
Even several of the conservative justices cast doubt on the administration's position.
That's NPR's Carrie Johnson reporting.
Stadium workers near Los Angeles have voted to authorize a strike ahead of the first World Cup match later this week.
NPR's Shondalee Stuster reports.
Unite Here Local 11, a union representing SoFi Stadium workers, says members,
including cashiers and concession workers, are demanding higher pay and job protections.
The union has also asked FIFA to demand that ICE and Border Patrol play no role at the World Cup.
L.A. County Sheriff Robert Luna says he was told by a local homeland
security official that federal agents would secure games and not conduct immigration enforcement.
"In regards to civil immigration enforcement, they told us that specifically would not be occurring
at any of the games." NPR reached out to FIFA and Legends Global,