Don't you want your Supreme Court justices to be a bit more unflappable than that?
And Congress should claw it back.
A GOP law on judicial appointments has been thrown out, and now it’s the judiciary itself that hangs in the balance.
A four-member majority washes its hands of the voter ID conflict
The Supreme Court justice’s departure doesn’t mark the conclusion of a generational shift. It is just the opening act.
The White House insisted allegations that it wanted to add a citizenship question to the survey for political reasons were conspiracy theories, right up until the moment the president confirmed them.
The justices banned execution of mentally disabled people in 2002. Now they are poised to tell death penalty states that they really meant it.
The constitutional maxim does not require states to use eligible voters when drawing legislative districts, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday.
The U.S. Supreme Court reconsiders how legislative districts are drawn—and risks sending the country back to a time before “one person, one vote.”