The president may eventually face legal liability, but he will not face a public reckoning for his actions before November.
"Comparativism"—using foreign legal rulings to help interpret the Constitution—is startlingly on the rise in the U.S. Supreme Court
As the 2016 elections near, the entire U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals will reconsider the state’s voter-ID law.
The conservative justices say that vaccine policy is Congress’s or the states’ job, but in practice they’re the ones calling the shots now.
How far do religious-liberty claims actually extend following the Supreme Court's ruling?
But the Supreme Court refused to say that rescinding DACA won’t occur in the future.
With a Supreme Court vacancy after Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death, Republican senators must again choose between country and party.
Flowers v. Mississippi reveals a rickety American legal system.
Saying nothing often is saying something.
Don't you want your Supreme Court justices to be a bit more unflappable than that?