From lavish vacations to fancy dinners, conservative activists have constructed an elaborate infrastructure to reward ideological loyalty on the high court.
Like Smaug from The Hobbit, the Roberts Court is remote, protective, and prone to sudden displays of fierceness.
In the new term, which starts Monday, the justices will hear cases on digital privacy, qualified immunity, and other major criminal-justice issues.
A federal judge in Hawaii ruled that grandparents and other close family members should be allowed into the country. The Justice Department is appealing the ruling to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court and Republican Party members are all voting in his favor.
Trinity Lutheran v. Comer finds that governments can’t discriminate against churches that would otherwise qualify for funding just because they’re religious institutions.
The Supreme Court will hear a case that's about which country the holy city belongs to -- and about which branches of the U.S. government can determine foreign policy
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.