The justices again appear poised to pursue a purely theoretical liberty at the expense of the lives of people of color.
A conversation about the nominee with Supreme Court watcher Stuart Taylor
The state's Supreme Court suspended the license of Attorney General Kathleen Kane, but she’s vowing to stay in office anyway.
For the first time, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that the power to recognize foreign governments is exclusive to the president.
Analysts who assume Congress won't pick up where the Supreme Court left off are forgetting the law's difficult fight just seven years ago.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s career offers a lesson for today’s Supreme Court.
In King v. Burwell, the Supreme Court has a chance to misconstrue the text of a statute its majority despises. It shouldn’t.
The big cases of 2014 may resolve some of the legal cliffhangers of 2013.
The Court will soon decide whether automated calls to cellphones, however annoying they may be, are constitutionally protected.