WASHINGTON, Dec 6 —The U.S. Supreme Court has given itself more opportunities in the coming months to overturn its own past rulings, a signal that its conservative justices are rethinking how much allegiance they owe to legal precedents set years ago by the nation’s top judicial body.

A case being argued on Monday involves one of the precedents now in the crosshairs before the court, whose 6-3 conservative majority has moved American law dramatically rightward in recent years including by overturning past decisions like in the 2022 case that rolled back abortion rights.

A 1935 precedent that limited presidential powers is at issue in Monday’s case, a challenge to the legality of President Donald Trump’s firing of an official in a federal agency set up by Congress with safeguards against

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