The Less Than Supreme Court
…Mitch McConnell’s further stuffing of the Supreme Court with right-wing justices Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Barrett further lessened the court. A court with bias is not a real court, but is…
…Mitch McConnell’s further stuffing of the Supreme Court with right-wing justices Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Barrett further lessened the court. A court with bias is not a real court, but is…
…heard, the Supreme Court struck down Donald Trump’s tariffs policy. The headlines wrote themselves. The New York Times, for example, heralded the decision as “the Supreme Court’s Declaration of Independence,” positing that…
…the Court should achieve unanimity by overturning the decision of the Colorado Supreme Court removing Trump from the Republican primary ballot in that state. This is justified by pointing vaguely…
…issued a sweeping injunction blocking it nationwide. The equally fringe-right U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit declined to halt his decision blocking the new regulation. The Supreme Court…
…received by justices between January 2004 and December 2023. Newsweek has contacted the U.S. Supreme Court for comment. “Fix the Court’s” executive director Gabe Roth said . . . “Supreme court…
…Supreme Court would become a Superlegislature: “Some perplexity respecting the rights of the courts to pronounce legislative acts void, because contrary to the Constitution, has arisen from an imagination that…
…sole authority to determine federal-court jurisdiction (subject to the Supreme Court’s determination that jurisdictional statute, or the absence of one, itself violates the Constitution). The other of the two Court-fabricated…
…treat freedmen as “the special favorite of the laws.” A written Constitution and courts supposedly to enforce it are weak guarantors of a liberal democratic society. The Supreme Court of…
…SCOTUS is. I believe this to be more judicial politicking than law. “The Supreme Court cooked up another phony case,” slate.com, Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern The Supreme Court…
…or priorities, and contractors required to implement federal priorities may therefor prefer to litigate in a federal court, as opposed to a state court selected by plaintiffs. A Supreme Court…