Could the battles over Supreme Court nominations become so acrimonious that it becomes impossible for anyone to win Senate confirmation?
The Supreme Court that will hear LGBTQ discrimination cases this week is radically different from the Court that legalized same-sex marriage four years ago.
“[The Court’s] own power is also enhanced by the fact that it will be judges deciding what are official or unofficial acts.”
Following the Supreme Court’s Wednesday decision, federal agencies can and should resume their efforts to communicate with social-media companies about disinformation online.
A mentally retarded man is scheduled to be executed next Monday, and he has an appeal pending to the Supreme Court.
The Court has rescued the former president from facing trial before the election for his attack on democracy.
This opinion can’t be squared with the language of the statute—or with common sense.
And how the Court's dissenters used the exact same reason to draw the opposite conclusion.
Byron York, Randall Kennedy, and Benjamin Wittes ponder the future of the Supreme Court and the coming confirmation hearings