Progressive organizers are betting they can flip the conventional wisdom on voting.
The Supreme Court laid down a marker for privacy in the smartphone era Wednesday—and Chief Justice John Roberts showed a surprising new savviness about technology.
Santorum's remarks are more plausible as legal analysis than most critics have acknowledged
The House and Senate bills punish Democratic constituencies, from college students to homeowners in big-city markets.
Despite the Sixth Amendment, in many jurisdictions, defendants don’t get legal representation the first time they go to court.
A federal appeals court finds the impact of the state’s voting law can only be explained by “discriminatory intent.”
Georgia has made the method by which it acquires pentobarbital a "state secret," which Hill's lawyers say raises questions about needless suffering and separation of powers.
The agency can still regulate carbon pollution, just not in the most efficient, system-wide ways.