A 9-0 decision to let California proceed with its crazy recall would strike a blow against government by judiciary.
A legal analysis of a provision in the contract that may pose problems for the president-elect
No president I know of has asserted a blanket power to reject any request that doesn’t suit him—until Donald Trump.
Whether they delight or disappoint, old books provide touchstones for tracking personal growth.
The liberal justices expanded the rights of corporations, without considering the limits of that doctrine.
Samuel Alito's 1985 job application, when considered together with his 300 judicial opinions, places him much closer than his critics to the center of American public opinion.
They spent more than a decade tacking left on the issue to win Latino votes. It may have cost them the White House—twice.
Half a decade after the Supreme Court’s same-sex-marriage decision, the justices and Congress are still trying to figure out what federal law should say about LGBTQ rights.
By comparing himself with a New Deal obstructionist, the conservative judge raises questions about the Court's future—and his own legacy.