Breyer's retirement from Supreme Court to take effect at noon on Thursday
CBSN
Washington — Justice Stephen Breyer will officially retire from the Supreme Court on Thursday at noon, he told President Biden in a letter, bringing his nearly 28-year tenure on the court to an end and paving the way for Ketanji Brown Jackson to take his place on the bench.
Breyer, 83, is leaving the Supreme Court at the end of a term that has seen no shortage of blockbuster cases, the most consequential of which was its decision Friday to overrule Roe v. Wade, as well as rulings expanding gun rights for the first time in a decade and in favor of religious rights.
The court will announce its two remaining opinions — the first, a dispute over the Environmental Protection Agency's authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, and the second, a challenge to the Biden administration's attempt to end the so-called "remain in Mexico" policy — on Thursday morning and then recess for the summer.

NASA announced ambitious long-range plans Tuesday to spend $20 billion over the next seven years to build a moon base near the lunar south pole featuring habitats, pressurized rovers and nuclear power systems. The announcement came just over a week before the planned launch of NASA's Artemis II around-the-moon mission. In:












