For years, the conservative majority has worked to cement a system where entrenched leaders pick their voters in a bid to stay in power indefinitely.
Opponents of same-sex unions try to convince the Supreme Court that the state has no interest in "love and commitment."
In a pair of rulings on partisan gerrymandering and the census, Chief Justice John Roberts enshrined the nation’s modern form of winner-take-all politics into law.
I thought I was writing fiction in The Handmaid’s Tale.
Twenty-one children brought a lawsuit arguing that the government needs to act on climate change. A federal court dismissed it.
Last week, the justices set a grim precedent for civil rights.
There are limits to the conservative theories that a majority of the justices are willing to endorse.
The Supreme Court's greatest failing is not ideological bias—it's the justices' increasingly tenuous grasp of how the real world works