Two journalists detail the results of their reporting on the Supreme Court justice’s past.
Protesters in Paraguay set fire to the parliament building, a deadly landslide in Colombia, and Venezuela’s supreme court backtracks on the country’s move toward dictatorship.
Oral arguments before the Justices offer clarity on the legal issues, but the law's fate is less certain than ever.
The Justices reject Alabama's claims that its legislative redistricting wasn't intended to separate voters by race as chimerical.
If a major attack incapacitated the president, Congress, or Supreme Court, the nation would have no way to replace them -- despite 12 years of warnings.
The confirmation process has shed little light on the philosophy of President Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court or on what kind of justice he will be.
Amid the ruckus over its voting rights and gay marriage rulings, the justices quietly accepted a pair of cases that could make it nearly impossible for private sector unions to organize new members.
The former justice offers sharp criticism of the majority opinion.
What was once constitutionally prohibited is now constitutionally required.
Readers discuss the implications of The American Legion v. American Humanist Association, which is being argued in the Supreme Court today.