The Supreme Court considers whether putting a Confederate battle flag on a license plate should be different than urging Americans to eat more beef.
Five of the nine justices negate a half-century of successful bipartisan self-government on the grounds that they could have done a better job.
“There are two distinct phases of American constitutional history: the one, the great struggle wherein the Union enforced the organic law upon the States; the other, the attempt of the Supreme Court to bridle Congress.”
In Obergefell v. Hodge, the justices complete a process they began, almost without knowing it, in 1996.
Researchers fear DIY pregnancy terminations will become more widespread if clinics continue shutting down.
In West Virginia v. EPA, the conservative justices acted like they were handing power to the people, but in reality they were giving it to themselves.
It’s time to revisit some of the most memorable events and images of 2022, including devastating floods across Pakistan, protests in the U.S. after the Supreme Court struck down the right to abortion, and much more.
What an off-the-cuff comment by John Roberts says about the level of transparency in the judiciary, and how -- slowly -- it may be starting to change