A Supreme Court case over whether passports for people born in Jerusalem should read "Israel" or not could have a surprisingly big effect on the balance of power in the United States.
Conservatives would suffer losses, but the notion that she would permanently vanquish originalism doesn’t withstand scrutiny.
Fifty years later, new accounts of its fraught passage reveal the era's real hero—and it isn’t the Supreme Court.
Despite an unusual number of 9-0 opinions this Supreme Court term, there are deep ideological divisions just below the surface.
Why is the Supreme Court giving more deference to a state grand jury than the Congress of the United States?
Attending town meetings can be awkward when the Supreme Court is currently hearing your lawsuit over the prayer in those meetings.
His allies now claim that he wouldn’t really impose massive global tariffs if elected. But the uncertainty created by threats is bad enough.
Texas challenges the president’s executive order on immigration at the U.S. Supreme Court. But the case never should have made it this far.
The Supreme Court veered into making law, rather than interpreting it, in barring capital punishment for juvenile offenders.