News

Another Supreme Court term has come and gone, which means it is once again time for law professors to write opinion columns revealing just how little they understand the subjects they are handsomely ...
On Tuesday, Senate Republicans passed a budget reconciliation bill which, if enacted, would slash lifesaving health and food assistance by hundreds of billions of dollars, and transfer billions more ...
It’s worthwhile to re-examine the reasoning of Ashcroft in such detail to see how the Supreme Court has changed its mind on a previously settled question of technology law and free speech. HB 1181, ...
The Court’s opinion in CASA presents class actions as a workable alternative to nationwide injunctions, which will be surprising to anyone with a passing familiarity with the Court’s hostility to ...
Earlier this year, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in Mahmoud v. Taylor, the conservative legal movement’s most ambitious attempt yet to refashion this country’s 250-year-old history of ...
A whistleblower report alleges that during his time at the Justice Department, Third Circuit nominee Emil Bove suggested telling a federal judge “fuck you” in response to a court order he did not like ...
On Monday, the Republicans on the Supreme Court issued an unsigned, unexplained order permitting the Trump administration to ship noncitizens to countries where they have never been and where they may ...
The Supreme Court held today in United States v. Skrmetti that the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution is no obstacle to laws that deny lifesaving medical care to transgender children. In 2023 ...
The study of McDonald’s death toll exposes the failures of a legal culture that strips Supreme Court cases of their context, reducing literal life-or-death questions to abstract debates about how to ...
The highlights of the résumé of Josh Divine, President Donald Trump’s nominee to a federal district court vacancy in Missouri, are standard-issue conservative legal movement stuff: a clerkship with ...
Against all odds, the “monsters” to whom Trump refers are not Stephen Miller and Kristi Noem, but the federal district court judges who have ruled against the administration 26 times this month alone.