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The Supreme Court Says Laws Aren’t Real
To cover the Supreme Court these days is to catalogue its lawlessness. The conservative justices’ latest decision in McMahon ...
Mark Joseph Stern: Under federal law, Trump cannot remove Powell over a policy disagreement. Federal law expressly allows for ...
While the Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority is pushing the law rightward, the justices appointed by GOP presidents ...
When the Supreme Court overturns rulings without offering any explanation, it is simply wielding raw power. And raw power ...
The Roberts Court has asked for reargument in a key redistricting case, a move that strongly suggests the conservative ...
Still pending before the Supreme Court this week is an appeal from Trump's lawyers that seeks the firing of three Democratic appointees to the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Georgetown University law professor Stephen Vladeck about a recent pattern within the Supreme Court majority: issuing rulings with no written opinion.
In their decision allowing the Trump administration to dismantle the Department of Education, the justices didn’t offer one ...
By a two-to-one margin, the public believes justices prioritize politics over the law. That's a disaster for the Supreme ...
The conservative wing of the Supreme Court gave the middle finger to Congress, low-income families, student-loan holders, ...
In yet another unsigned ruling, the conservative majority treated a department closure like it’s just some minor layoffs.
In a precedent-based legal system, you can’t know what the law is if you don’t have judicial opinions explaining why the courts have reached their conclusions.