Supreme Court Rejects Lawsuit Against Bayer Alleging Roundup Weedkiller Caused Cancer
The court’s decision is likely to determine the future of thousands of lawsuits against Bayer, which manufactures the weedkiller, over similar claims.

A legal expert said on Thursday that a recent spate of decisions published by the Supreme Court made some of the liberal justices "incandescently angry" because the majority opinions read like "gaslighting."The court published opinions on a range of cases, from one that protects chemical giant Monsanto from lawsuits over cancer-causing chemicals in some of its products to an opinion that ended Temporary Protected Status for Haitian immigrants. In each of the cases, Lithwick argued, the court's majority continued to "twist itself into pretzels" to give the Trump administration what it wanted, according to Dahlia Lithwick, a lawyer and journalist. "The Court twisted itself into pretzels to say that the words that come out of Donald Trump's mouth have no significance," Lithwick argued during MS NOW's "Deadline: White House" with host Nicolle Wallace, referring to previous cases where the court ignored the president's words when determining the intent behind an immigration policy. "And this is the same problem on rocket fuel." "To have Justice Alito in his majority just batted away so much so that he won't even acknowledge it, which forces, in some sense, Justice Kagan to read it into the record to create a dissent where she says, 'Here are the words that were said that are emblematic of what Donald Trump was trying to do.' It really tells you again the degree to which the gaslighting is truly the thing that is making the justices ... absolutely incandescently angry."
The court’s decision is likely to determine the future of thousands of lawsuits against Bayer, which manufactures the weedkiller, over similar claims.
One member of the “Make America Healthy Again” movement said the decision was "sickening" after the Supreme Court ruled that Bayer, the manufacturer of Roundup, did not need to warn consumers of a potential cancer risk associated with its weed killer. NBC News’ Julie Tsirkin reports on the MAHA movement's frustration with the Supreme Court's ruling.
The Supreme Court's decision in an immigration case was a clear scolding of leftist judges who have repeatedly sought to halt Trump's policies.
The Trump administration backed Bayer, the maker of Roundup, angering prominent voices in the “Make America Healthy Again” movement.
Plus, Iran’s ship attack in the Strait of Hormuz tests Trump’s deal, and English roadside diners are turning into sex shops.
A 7-2 majority stops a mass tort attempt to evade federal law on regulating a Monsanto pesticide.
The Supreme Court left President Trump and gun rights advocates celebrating Thursday. In a series of 6-3 decisions, the high court ticked off some of its anticipated remaining cases as the justices move closer to their summer recess. But their rulings didn’t come without friction on the bench. Here are five takeaways. Trump’s appointees help…
The Supreme Court handed the Trump Administration two major victories on Thursday, voting 6-3 in decisions regarding Haitian and Syrian immigrants. NBC News Senior Legal Correspondent Laura Jarrett and Senior Homeland Security Correspondent Julia Ainsley join Meet the Press NOW to break down how these decisions could deport thousands of immigrants.