Justice Stephen Breyer hasn’t retired yet. But filling Supreme Court seats is just one battle in a war over the judiciary—one that progressives worry they’re losing.
The question is not why the Court has so many controversies, but why they generate so much more outrage than they used to.
The first woman of color in Congress opposed G. Harrold Carswell’s nomination in 1970 and helped clear a path for Harry Blackmun, who wrote the Roe v. Wade opinion. It seems particularly relevant now.
With Anthony Kennedy’s retirement, there’s a great deal of uncertainty about how a reconfigured Supreme Court will react to future cases.
The state seems to be exaggerating the upheaval caused by the McGirt decision two years ago.
The country’s Supreme Court has upheld the measure that requires married couples to have the same last names.
By moving forward with the Supreme Court confirmation, the president is giving lawmakers little space to carve out an independent identity that could help them win reelection.
The U.S. Supreme Court justice said she regretted her remarks about the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, but did not explicitly apologize.