Law & Court Decisions — 2026-06-03
The Supreme Court cleared Alabama's pro-Republican voting map this week, while a fair trial ruling emerged Monday. Meanwhile, Microsoft faces potential FTC antitrust scrutiny over cloud and AI services, and 29 states backed the FTC's appeal of Meta's antitrust loss as the agency escalates pressure on Big Tech giants.
Law & Court Decisions — 2026-06-03
Supreme Court & Federal Courts
Alabama Voting Map Cleared — U.S. Supreme Court
- Holding: The Supreme Court cleared the way for Alabama to use a pro-Republican voting map, rejecting a challenge to the state's redistricting plan.
- Vote / posture: Order issued; unsigned decision with no explanation provided
- Why it matters: The ruling signals the Court's continued skepticism toward voting rights challenges and may embolden states to pursue contested maps in the midterm election cycle. The decision came as the Court faces pending rulings on mail-in ballots and campaign finance limits that could reshape the November midterms.
Fair Trial Rights Decision — U.S. Supreme Court
- Holding: On June 1, 2026, the Supreme Court issued an unsigned opinion affirming criminal defendants' fundamental right to a fair trial, addressing due process standards.
- Vote / posture: Unsigned opinion; rationale not detailed
- Why it matters: This decision reinforces protections for criminal defendants at a time when courts nationwide are examining trial procedures and jury impartiality standards.
Supreme Court Opinion Season Underway — Multiple Courts
- Holding: The Court is in its peak decision-issuing period, with major rulings on elections, gun control, immigration, and other constitutional issues still pending through June.
- Vote / posture: Decisions forthcoming in coming weeks
- Why it matters: June is traditionally the Supreme Court's busiest opinion-announcement month, and several decisions could reshape law on voting procedures, campaign spending, and state electoral authority heading into the 2026 midterms.
Tech Antitrust & Regulatory Battles
Microsoft — Potential FTC Antitrust Target
- What happened this week: The Verge reported (2 days ago) that Microsoft could become the next Big Tech antitrust target, following scrutiny of Apple, Google, Meta, and Amazon. Regulators are reportedly investigating Microsoft's cloud and AI practices.
- Stakes: If the FTC pursues action, it would mark a major escalation in antitrust enforcement against cloud computing and artificial intelligence service providers—sectors where Microsoft has grown dominant through Azure and AI partnerships.
- Status: Investigation stage; no formal charges filed yet.

Meta Antitrust Appeal — 29 States Back FTC Challenge
- What happened this week: On May 31, 2026, 29 states filed support for the FTC's appeal of the November 2025 federal court ruling that rejected the agency's attempt to force Meta to divest Instagram and WhatsApp.
- Stakes: A successful appeal would allow the FTC to pursue forced divestiture as a remedy for alleged anticompetitive acquisition practices. Loss of the appeal leaves the social media giant intact but under continued regulatory scrutiny.
- Status: Appeal pending in federal court; no oral argument date set yet.
Google Search Monopoly Appeal — U.S. Court of Appeals
- What happened this week: Google continues its appeal of the May 2026 federal district court ruling that found the company holds illegal monopolies in search and search advertising, requiring data-sharing with rivals.
- Stakes: A reversal on appeal could spare Google from breaking up search functionality or sharing proprietary data with competitors. An affirmance would establish landmark precedent that search is not a natural monopoly and is subject to behavioral remedies.
- Status: Appeal filed and pending; briefing schedule ongoing.
Other Notable Rulings & Enforcement
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EU Digital Markets Act Enforcement Against Big Tech: EU regulators are now targeting Amazon and Microsoft's cloud services for potential "gatekeeper" designations under the Digital Markets Act, expanding the law's reach beyond social media and search into infrastructure services. The Commission has also opened investigations into Meta's AI features in WhatsApp.
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Supreme Court Reverses Lower Court on Immigration Judges: On May 26, 2026, the Supreme Court sided with the Trump administration in a venue dispute over immigration judges' public speaking restrictions, reversing a lower court's decision.
Case of the Week — Deep Dive
Microsoft Cloud & AI Antitrust Investigation
Microsoft's emergence as a potential FTC antitrust target represents a significant expansion of the agency's Big Tech enforcement strategy into cloud infrastructure and artificial intelligence—two sectors where the company has become increasingly dominant. This week's Verge report indicates that following setbacks against Meta (which won its antitrust case in November 2025) and ongoing appeals of Google's search monopoly finding, regulators are broadening their focus to capture the full ecosystem of tech power.
The FTC's preliminary interest in Microsoft centers on cloud computing (Azure) and AI services, particularly partnerships with OpenAI. Unlike social media or search, cloud services lack obvious consumer-facing alternatives, making the market structure harder for judges to evaluate. Regulators will likely argue that Microsoft's integration of AI tools into its cloud offerings, bundled licensing practices, and exclusive partnerships with AI companies constitute anticompetitive tying or predatory bundling. Microsoft, which is already under EU scrutiny for similar conduct under the Digital Markets Act, may argue that the market is competitive and rapidly evolving.
If the FTC initiates formal litigation, it would mark the agency's fourth major Big Tech case since 2020. However, the agency has won mixed results: Google's search case succeeded at the district level (appeal pending), Meta's case failed, and Amazon's e-commerce case continues. A Microsoft case would test whether antitrust law can reach infrastructure-layer dominance in the AI era—a question with enormous implications for how tech competition is regulated going forward.
What to Watch Next
- June 2026 — Supreme Court opinion announcements (multiple high-stakes decisions on voting, guns, immigration, and campaign finance expected)
- June 2026 — FTC likely to decide whether to formally charge Microsoft with antitrust violations
- Summer 2026 — Meta antitrust appeal oral arguments expected in federal circuit court
- July 2026 — Google search case appellate briefing likely to conclude; potential oral argument window opens
Reader Takeaways
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If you run a business: Antitrust liability is expanding beyond social media into cloud services and AI. If you use Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services, or Google Cloud, monitor regulatory action closely—forced interoperability requirements or data-sharing mandates could reshape service contracts and pricing within 18–24 months.
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If you build tech products: Cloud providers and AI platform operators face heightened scrutiny. Exclusive partnerships with AI companies, bundled licensing, and lock-in features may draw regulatory challenges. Design products with portability and openness in mind.
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If you're a consumer: Supreme Court decisions on voting maps this week signal courts will not block redistricting aggressively, potentially affecting election competitiveness. Meanwhile, FTC antitrust victories or losses will determine whether you have real choice among cloud providers and AI services in coming years.
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