The Republicans are angry—and both parties are beholden to special interests.
The U.S. Supreme Court will review an Ohio procedure that removes voters from the rolls if they haven’t cast a ballot in six years and fail to return a postcard.
The justices have destroyed all the rules, customs, and traditions that used to restrain gerrymanders
While we wait for the main course -- the Affordable Care Act case -- the Court offers some intriguing appetizers
The Supreme Court wants the real reason for census change, and the government is running out of time to give it.
The Supreme Court vacancy will surely inflame an already-angry nation.
If the major rulings handed down this week seemed contradictory to you -- sometimes protecting state power, sometimes reducing it -- you're not the only one.
Win or lose at the Supreme Court, the GOP is likely to suffer at the ballot box as long as health is a central issue in future campaigns.
As elections near, partisans always invoke a threat to the "balance" of the Court. But the real peril isn't ideology—it's blandness
The Supreme Court will hear a challenge to the “separate sovereigns” doctrine in Gamble v. United States.