While the nation was focused on big, controversial cases, corporate America was quietly racking up a remarkable string of victories in the high court this term.
Some progressives say Obama could appoint Merrick Garland without Senate approval. Only voters can change the situation.
In Green v. New Kent County, the Court saw school desegregation as a reparative process—likely the closest thing to reparations that the American judicial system has ever endorsed.
The Supreme Court looks at how robbing a drug dealer can trip the Hobbs Act’s commerce provision and bring a petty thief a lot of federal trouble.
A Supreme Court ruling in favor of Shaun McCutcheon would set the stage for totally eliminating remaining campaign-finance laws.
The president lays out a passionate defense of the healthcare law just weeks before a major decision is expected.
The West Virginia v. EPA ruling signals a future in which no one in power has the ability to tackle the biggest issues society faces.
The outspoken Supreme Court justice weighs in on the Senate torture report.
The legal reasoning may look like it turns on obscure technicalities, but the administration’s cases are falling apart because of something much more deeply wrong.