Opponents of same-sex unions try to convince the Supreme Court that the state has no interest in "love and commitment."
There are limits to the conservative theories that a majority of the justices are willing to endorse.
I thought I was writing fiction in The Handmaid’s Tale.
The Supreme Court's greatest failing is not ideological bias—it's the justices' increasingly tenuous grasp of how the real world works
Last week, the justices set a grim precedent for civil rights.
Twenty-one children brought a lawsuit arguing that the government needs to act on climate change. A federal court dismissed it.
The Supreme Court's ruling on campaign finance means that all but the most blatant corruption is likely to escape the law's scrutiny.
The move raises the stakes of the presidential election for those concerned about global warming.
Based on their opinion in yesterday's affirmative action case, three Supreme Court justices seem to think that minority rights should be left in the hands of voters.
On Thursday, the woman accusing the Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexually assaulting her while the two were in high school will testify before a panel of lawmakers.