A case being argued before the U.S. Supreme Court would limit representation to eligible voters—favoring wealthier, whiter, and more conservative citizens.
Her experience more than two decades ago as Stephen Breyer’s clerk suggests that much about the current Court will be familiar to her.
By accepting Trump’s argument for keeping his finances secret, the Court could strip Congress of its ability to hold this, or any, president to account.
Defying the tenor of the 2016 election, during a case over the president’s power to appoint temporary heads of agencies, the Supreme Court tries to function as it should.
The current Supreme Court justices have stretched their powers further than ever before. They've gone too far down the road of judicial supremacy.
With its decision on S.B. 8, the Court is signaling that other states are welcome to imitate Texas’s strategy for eviscerating long-held legal protections.
Public interest in death penalty cases waxes and wanes, but the bad faith that infects so many court decisions is here to stay
U.S. officials said the sanctions are punishment for the court's takeover of Venezuela’s democratically-elected congress.
The Court just ruled that a state can collect taxes from a retailer that doesn’t have a physical presence in the state. Here’s what that means.
In overturning the criminal convictions that resulted from the Bridgegate scandal, the Court is embracing a view of the world that is unbearably bleak.