The Supreme Court has ample reason to avoid deciding a case that could erode the Establishment Clause.
The Justice Department won’t defend Obamacare’s preexisting-conditions provision in court—the latest in the administration’s assault on the law.
The 6–3 majority-conservative Supreme Court is dangerously out of step with a demographically and culturally changing America.
The best solution to the increasingly politicized and unseasoned Court is to limit justices to 18-year terms.
As the U.S. Supreme Court backs away from protecting the right to vote, state judges are looking toward their constitutions.
The Supreme Court said it won’t hear a petition to strike down a colonial-era law that bans gay sex.
This administration seems to regard “extraordinary relief” from the high court as nothing more than its due.
In the four years since the Supreme Court gutted part of a landmark civil-rights law, state-level legislation has undercut the justices’ rationale for doing so.
Conservative activists keep asking the Court to hear cases that are already irrelevant—and, worryingly, the Court keeps saying yes.
The question of the former president’s possible disqualification needs to be resolved sooner or later. Sooner is better than later.