If they want to win, Democrats should view themselves not as the minority—but as the opposition. Democrats are now free from the burden of having to govern as the minority in Congress.
Democrats want you to believe that the U.S. Supreme Court is there to do whatever Donald Trump wants. Justice Barrett proves that's not the case.
As the justices took up a case about age verification for online adult content, they struggled to wrap their heads around the ...
The Supreme Court on Tuesday grappled with the case of Patrick Daley Thompson, a former Chicago alderman and member of Chicago’s most storied political dynasty. Thompson served four months in a ...
Federal Judge Aileen Cannon ordered a Friday hearing to discuss releasing a DOJ report in the dismissed classified document ...
The Supreme Court on Tuesday signaled it may send a Chicago political scion’s appeal of his conviction for lying to ...
The Supreme Court on Monday appeared sympathetic to a retired Florida firefighter who is seeking to sue her former employer under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Karyn Stanley, who worked for the ...
Chloe Miracle-Rutledge is a JURIST Supreme Court Correspondent and a 2L at Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, DC ...
But TikTok and some users say the divest-or-disappear law violates the First Amendment. The two lawyers pressing that point faced scepticism. When Noel Francisco, arguing for the company, said ...
A majority of justices on the Supreme Court appear inclined to uphold a federal law that would ban the video-sharing app TikTok in the U.S. after Jan. 19 unless its Chinese-owned parent company, ...
Donald Trump will be sentenced Friday in his New York hush money case, after the Supreme Court deemed his sentence ...
The Supreme Court appears inclined to uphold a law that would ban the video-sharing app TikTok in the U.S. after Jan. 19 unless its China-owned parent company divests.