We’ve had 40 years of race-based redistricting processes. It’s time to end the practice, argues guest columnist Jack Park.
How can a conservative jurist come across as both undeniably wise and hopelessly Pollyannaish at the same time? Allow Supreme ...
The SCOTUSblog team reads a lot of legal news each week. Here’s the most memorable headline from the past few days: Go fetch!
A panel of legal scholars will gather next week to examine what two Supreme Court justices' recent challenge to congressional ...
Nuts and Bolts is a recurring series by Stephen Wermiel providing insights into the mechanics of how the Supreme Court works.
The word “filibuster,” which derives from a Dutch term for pirates and plunderers, somehow came to describe those who disrupt ...
On Thursday, a federal district judge allowed a lawsuit challenging the Department of Education’s mass cancellation of grants related to “diversity” to move forward, rejecting the Trump administration ...
Texas appeals federal court ruling that blocked new redistricting map, potentially costing Republicans five House seats in ...
Traditionally, the emergency docket — colloquially known as the shadow docket — has been where the U.S. Supreme Court rules ...
Advocates of marriage equality breathed a sigh of relief last week when the U.S. Supreme Court refused to take up a request that it consider overturning its 2015 landmark decision, Obergefell v.
The court must determine whether the emergency aid exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement necessitates a showing of probable cause that someone inside the home requires emergency aid.