The Supreme Court started the current term in October with a docket that could have a lasting impact on politics and culture, including major cases on partisan gerrymandering and LGBT rights.

Six months later, the justices are done with oral arguments and approaching the end of the term in June. And they haven’t crossed off much on their to-do list.

“It’s even hard to imagine, given how slowly the court has been working through its docket, simply the crush of momentous decisions that are going to come down in the month of June,” Elizabeth Wydra, president of the Constitutional Accountability Center, said at an event last week.

The Supreme Court typically leaves its contentious and high-profile cases for closer to the end of the term. But the justices have adopted a historically slow pace through April, issuing just 23 opinions, said Adam Feldman, a postdoctoral fellow at Columbia Law School and creator of a high court statistics blog, Empirical SCOTUS.

What to Watch as Supreme Court Prepares Major Decisions