transgender or found out to be gay. whether the supreme court will agree with them will be quite interesting to watch. reporter: that ruling is being closely watched because it could impact cases around the country dealing with businesses that claim a religious liberty right to deny their services. one of the most closely watched cases deal with daca. the high court will decide whether the trump administration is able to move ahead with plans to end obama era protections for 800,000 people brought into the country illegally as children. up until now, federal appeals courts rejected administration arguments on this case. but the white house is hopeful that will change in this final ruling. all of these rulings are expected to come down in june in the thick of the presidential campaigns. like the last election, the high court is expected to be a major issue in 2020. i suspect the last few years have underscored the significance and importance of a single seat on the court.
resort beijing, maybe the most dangerous but we re watching it. back to you. game changer in case of potential u.s. response. greg, real quick, you and i have been in these crowds and various places. cairo, comes to mind as well as ukraine. how do the protests compare to what we ve seen of popular uprisings in the past? reporter: very tough on both sides, leland. month by month, we ve been here starting since june have been playing a tougher game. we ve seen it from the protesters. they were peaceful months ago. now they re moving, throwing rocks, molotov cocktails, gas bombs and erecting barricades. i have to say they are the most polite protesters i have ever seen. in iraq, in baghdad, other places, these guys take their time. they part the ways for an ambulance. they make sure that you re okay. if i have to be around some protesters i take these guys but
middle of a presidential election year. here we have a stellar panel, carrie severino, constitutional accountability center president, elizabeth wyle. workplace discrimination when it pertains to lgbtq. both people say they were fired because they were gay. a transgender case as well. what do you see happens with this? we see this in and other cases both sides are trying to claim the man tell of text allism, originalism. our meaning is first, original meaning. this is challenge to do so, because of sex, very clearly 1965, it was clear what they meant. they meant because of sex specifically. there was a there is distinction between discriminating someone on basis of sex. so if you fired someone who is gay man but not a lesbian woman, that is discrimination on basis of sex.
this case the question is not a good idea to add to the law, but is the court right entity to do it? that is something should be reserved for the legislature f they are changing. jillian: what do you say. the law says because of sex. if i am person attracted to person of same sex that is because of section, if you fire me because of that if i present and adfy the gender difference from one assigned at birth, that is because of sex. it is really about the words that congress passed and applying them equally to our lgbtq colleagues, coworkers and neighbors. jillian: move on to the next which is immigration and executive power this is stemming from the process trying to phase out daca. where do you see this one going? this is real interesting case particularly the chief justice because certainly have the discretion in immigration areas
we were talking, with a number of members of the trump campaign who feel as though, not only do they want to keep those, they will fight there, but looking to expanding the map a little bit. we talked a little bit wisconsin. jillian: specifically in wisconsin to add to some numbers, polling numbers the you were talking about. the president won rural voters about 27 points in 2016 they only back him over biden by two points right now. that is pretty significant difference. a lot of people are worried about the tariffs. a lot of people see that as a positive. a lot of people especially in rural communities worry about that. farm communities in michigan, wisconsin and minnesota where the president wants to pick up have been really, really impacted. not only farmers themselves but implement dealers, feed stores, people who work on the farms, et cetera. long way to go before now and next november. stay tuned. jillian: a lot is going to happen. no reason we can t keep talking about it wh