The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case that could deal a serious blow to American organized labor.
It doesn't matter whether an employer is secular or religious, non-profit or for-profit. The Supreme Court’s precedents show that the government's interest in nationwide programs trumps all.
Supreme Court cases on gay marriage and the Affordable Care Act test the chief justice's commitment to judicial restraint.
Though its major import is President Trump’s official endorsement of racist discrimination in law enforcement, a flagrant contempt for judges is the subtext.
The remaining presidential candidates have each said they’d fix big money in political races. But if the Supreme Court overturned its latest campaign-finance rulings, would anything really change?
The Supreme Court considers whether states that charge inmates with fees and restitution have to return that money if their convictions are set aside.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Kingsley departs from a history of giving deference to law-enforcement officers.
The Supreme Court's job is to check the executive and legislative branches when they threaten liberty. In the War on Terror, it has sometimes failed.
Judges may be human, says the associate justice of the Supreme Court, but that doesn't mean they're swayed by the public or the president