News

The Supreme Court’s conservative majority continued to march American law toward the right during its term that ended last week, in a steady stream of 6-3 decisions in major cases along with a flood ...
While the Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority is pushing the law rightward, the justices appointed by GOP presidents ...
Empirical SCOTUS is a recurring series by Adam Feldman that looks at Supreme Court data, primarily in the form of opinions ...
The court left open the possibility of class action suits, but those are often difficult if not impossible. Simply put, the ...
The 6-3 majority was solidified in former President Donald Trump's term, but its roots go back to the Bushes and the political circumstances of 1991 and 2005.
Supreme Court rejects conservative challenge to Obamacare health coverage Two Christian-owned businesses and some people in Texas argued that experts recommending what health insurance must cover ...
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority could make consequential decisions this month on race as a factor in college admissions, the Voting Rights Act and religious freedom. Here’s what one ...
As the Supreme Court races to issue all outstanding opinions by a self-imposed early July deadline, there is little doubt that the conservative majority is prepared to continue the right-ward ...
Supreme Court ruled for red states, conservative parents and Trump, while the three liberals dissented.
America's conservative legal movement found a fast track to the Supreme Court, but the justices are pushing back.
In addition to deciding cases, those justices also have the votes to decide which cases the court hears, setting the agenda in the process.
A bipartisan Supreme Court majority preserved democratic checks and balances.