Thirty years after his death, Thurgood Marshall’s ideas still resonate.
In United States v. Texas, the Supreme Court has put forth a question on the definition of the take-care clause, which in the past been difficult to decipher.
A justice of the Supreme Court should not act like a high schooler on the bench; when the target is a fellow justice, the offense is even greater.
Yet even some conservatives who’ve had the billionaire lie to their faces trust his pledge to nominate originalist judges to the Supreme Court.
A third accusation of sexual misconduct against the Supreme Court nominee comes the day before a climactic Senate Judiciary Committee hearing.
The justices will take on a complicated set of cases related to the birth-control mandate in the Affordable Care Act.
The Supreme Court decision on school integration illustrates the pitfalls of both the conservative and the liberal approaches to the problem of race.
The Supreme Court's interpretation of the First Amendment would protect even the racist chant at the University of Oklahoma—but it shouldn't.
A Supreme Court ruling signals it’s possible. But pot is the least of Mexico’s problems.