A lawsuit challenging Colorado's Taxpayer Bill of Rights raises uncomfortable questions about federalism and the Constitution's Guaranty Clause.
The Watergate scandal forced his resignation 50 years ago. Today, he’d probably have gotten away with it.
A three-judge panel ruled Wednesday that immigrant children held in detention are entitled to present their case before an immigration judge.
A new decision shows the powerful legacy of Hobby Lobby.
A federal judge in Washington, D.C., ruled against the Obama administration’s method of funding a major Affordable Care Act subsidy.
GOP leaders have tried—and failed—to come up with new congressional districts after the state’s highest court ruled their last effort was too favorable to their party.
A Houston attorney wants the Supreme Court to define what it means to be a natural-born citizen, but the lawsuit seems certain to be tossed.
The first days of the criminal case against the former president have been mundane, even boring—and that’s remarkable.
The White House point person on immigration is pursuing a strategy that is bedeviling his opponents and could provoke a constitutional crisis.