
The Senate Should Leave No Judgeship Unfilled
Donald Trump will try to fill every judgeship that Democrats leave open.
By The Editorial Board
Donald Trump will try to fill every judgeship that Democrats leave open.
By The Editorial Board
Donald J. Trump is set to regain office without clarity on the scope of presidential immunity and with a lingering cloud over whether outside special counsels can investigate high-level wrongdoing.
By Charlie Savage
Justice Antonin Scalia, a conservative giant, said attempts to circumvent the Senate’s responsibility to vet nominees were “ignoble” and “just made up.”
By Adam Liptak
The once and future president’s constitutional gimmicks are embarrassingly transparent.
By David French
A conservative group argues that Congress gave the Federal Communications Commission too much discretion over an $8 billion fund.
By Adam Liptak
A few victories made it easy for Democrats to forget that the law is just another domain of politics where their enemies enjoy power too.
By Samuel Moyn
Three states are calling on the federal courts for help in making women have more babies.
By Linda Greenhouse
He argued 20 times before the Supreme Court and prepared witnesses like Marie Yovanovitch and Christine Blasey Ford for their congressional testimony.
By Richard Sandomir
The progressive stronghold in California plans to target large encampments, relying on a Supreme Court decision handed down by a conservative majority.
By Shawn Hubler
Her unusual approach to building bridges between her wealthy campus and its beleaguered hometown led to a Supreme Court case and a faculty revolt.
By Trip Gabriel
Democracy’s ultimate verdict has been delivered.
By Thomas Goldstein
The conservative legal group’s annual dinner featured a conversation between Justices Stephen G. Breyer and Neil M. Gorsuch, a conservative. Both stressed the importance of an independent judiciary.
By Adam Liptak
A renowned Supreme Court litigator, he argued the Republican side in Bush v. Gore, but later championed gay rights and undocumented children.
By Clay Risen
The case, which is in an early stage, accused the giant technology company of misleading investors about its exposure to the cryptocurrency industry.
By Adam Liptak
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The once and future president is pushing Republicans to systematically abdicate the Senate’s constitutional role in vetting his nominees.
By Charlie Savage
The Supreme Court is largely to blame for the challenges it may face over the next four years.
By Stephen I. Vladeck
Readers discuss the production of the Bard’s plays today. Also: Elderly and physically active; investing in youth to reduce crime; political corruption.
Coaxing aging Supreme Court justices to give up their power and status during a window of political opportunity can be a delicate endeavor.
By Charlie Savage, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan
In recent years, new administrations have not been shy about disavowing positions taken by their predecessors.
By Adam Liptak
The man, a former health care worker, was convicted in July on two charges stemming from the privacy breach and his attempts to cover it up.
By Aimee Ortiz
Donald J. Trump, the first felon elected president, has a sentencing scheduled for Nov. 26. He has many ways to avoid punishment.
By Ben Protess and Kate Christobek
By triumphing at the ballot box, Donald Trump can dispense with federal charges against him while postponing or derailing other pending cases that have dogged him.
By Devlin Barrett, Alan Feuer and Charlie Savage
Los expertos señalan que es poco probable que el tribunal termine ejerciendo un papel importante en el resultado, pero es posible. Te contamos por qué.
By Kate Christobek
It is unlikely that the court ends up playing a major role in the outcome, according to elections experts, but it is possible. Here’s why.
By Kate Christobek
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The case, which will not affect this election cycle, involves a legal fight over how the state draws its voting maps and could determine the political power of Black voters there.
By Abbie VanSickle
Thousands of women rallied in the capital and across the country for a Kamala Harris presidency — and to proclaim their resistance to Republican aims to restrict women’s reproductive rights.
By Aishvarya Kavi
Republicans had sought to block the counting of provisional ballots by voters whose mail-in ballots were deemed invalid. Democrats celebrated the ruling as a win in a crucial state.
By Abbie VanSickle
You aren’t just choosing a candidate. You’re choosing a theory of power.
By Jamelle Bouie
A divided court sided with Republicans, allowing the state to cull about 1,600 voters less than a week before Election Day.
By Abbie VanSickle
Plus, refunds for canceled flights.
By Tracy Mumford, Peter Baker, Jack Nicas, Robert Jimison, Ian Stewart and Jessica Metzger
Since throwing his support behind former President Donald J. Trump, Mr. Kennedy has sought both to be removed from and to remain on various state ballots.
By Abbie VanSickle
Arbitration caught on for good reason, but it has drifted too far from its original purpose.
By Peter Coy
The insults hurled at Ms. Harris are a reminder of how Republican senators tried to shame me when I challenged Clarence Thomas’s fitness.
By Anita Hill
Activists on both sides say Trump could effectively ban abortion nationwide and establish fetal personhood, the longtime goal of the anti-abortion movement.
By Kate Zernike
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A Republican super PAC is running ads invoking the name of Ruth Bader Ginsburg to help Donald Trump win voters who favor abortion rights. Her family denounced the effort as “nothing short of appalling.”
By Shane Goldmacher, Theodore Schleifer, Maggie Haberman and Jodi Kantor
Trump’s great accomplishment is to spread the dangerous lie that our problems can be blamed on the weakest and most vulnerable in our midst.
By Jamelle Bouie
The former president’s request to file a new motion contesting how the special counsel got his job came on the same day he vowed to fire him if re-elected.
By Alan Feuer
Judges have vast influence over the biggest political questions. An analysis of President Biden and Donald J. Trump’s nominees found stark differences that could emerge again after November.
By Mattathias Schwartz and June Kim
Princess Gloria von Thurn und Taxis bonded with Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. over Catholicism and ending abortion. She introduced him to her sumptuous world when he visited her Bavarian palace.
By Abbie VanSickle, Philip Kaleta and Ingmar Nolting
A Georgetown law professor argues that five rulings by the justices in recent years have allowed behavior that is “sketchy as hell” and meant to make the judiciary look good by contrast.
By Adam Liptak
The Supreme Court ruled in June that the original plaintiffs, anti-abortion doctors and groups, did not have standing to sue. Now three states are trying to continue the legal fight.
By Pam Belluck
A case involving TikTok may have opened the door to holding platforms liable for the damage they cause.
By Julia Angwin
The Supreme Court’s decision to not temporarily block an E.P.A. rule this week signals ‘rising influence’ of Justice Barrett, one analyst said.
By Karen Zraick
The former president’s legal team had objected to any release of material, saying it would amount to election interference.
By Alan Feuer and Charlie Savage
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The justices heard arguments on Wednesday in a long-simmering dispute between San Francisco and the E.P.A. over regulation of water pollution.
By Abbie VanSickle
It was a provisional victory for the Biden administration, whose climate initiatives have been stymied. A challenge to the rule at issue is still moving through a lower court.
By Abbie VanSickle
There are perfectly legal explanations for why schools’ demographics might not change after the fall of affirmative action.
By Sonja B. Starr
The driver, Douglas Horn, sued the maker of a product said to be free of THC under a federal racketeering law, saying he had suffered a business injury.
By Adam Liptak
November’s second-most-important election is in Florida.
By David French
Readers discuss recent hurricanes and actions that citizens can take. Also: Jack Smith’s timing; the Supreme Court and the campaign; therapy as health care; a Trumpian character.
Lawmakers must assert their power to reject the justices’ interpretations of the Constitution and enact their own.
By Nikolas Bowie and Daphna Renan
Larry Hogan, the Republican former governor, and Angela Alsobrooks, the Democratic Prince George’s County executive, sparred over whether to expand the Supreme Court and overhaul the legislative filibuster.
By Luke Broadwater
Say no to court packing — and yes to term limits.
By David French
The latest threat to our right to speak freely comes all the way from the 1700s.
By Jacob D. Charles and Matthew L. Schafer
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Some justices said the court was powerless to grant relief to the inmate, Richard Glossip. Others seemed ready to order a new trial or at least an evidentiary hearing.
By Adam Liptak
Readers discuss Donald Trump’s age and cognitive patterns. Also: A traumatized Israel; the “ghost guns” case; Eric Adams; A.I. and nuclear power.
The Justice Department should not have allowed revelations about the Trump Jan. 6 case to be disclosed so close to Election Day.
By Jack Goldsmith
Plus, have we reached peak human life span?
By Tracy Mumford, Ruth Igielnik, Patricia Mazzei, Robert Jimison and Jessica Metzger
At issue was how the Biden administration had interpreted a federal statute to regulate kits that could be assembled into homemade guns, skirting background checks.
By Abbie VanSickle
Both sides told the Supreme Court that long-suppressed evidence about the state’s star witness undermined the case against the inmate, Richard Glossip.
By Adam Liptak
The administration said a state abortion law conflicted with a federal law requiring emergency care. The court similarly sidestepped a case from Idaho in June.
By Adam Liptak
The justices considered a routine case on unemployment benefits in characteristic style, peppering the lawyers with questions and dropping hints about their views.
By Adam Liptak
The number of untraceable homemade guns recovered at crime scenes has fallen since the enactment of rules restricting the sale of the weapons, according to law enforcement statistics.
By Glenn Thrush
If it loses its institutional credibility, it will be powerless when it matters most.
By Nancy Gertner and Stephen I. Vladeck
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Will the court resume or refrain from injecting itself into the country’s culture wars?
By Linda Greenhouse
Aside from major disputes on issues like transgender rights and guns, the docket is fairly routine. That could change fast if the presidential race is contested.
By Adam Liptak
Three cases all stem from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in New Orleans, which often finds itself to the right of the Supreme Court.
By Abbie VanSickle and Adam Liptak
Republican-led states and industry groups argued that the Environmental Protection Agency had moved too fast and imposed onerous regulations.
By Abbie VanSickle and Adam Liptak
The justices will consider whether a 2005 law that gives gun makers broad immunity applies in the case, which accuses them of complicity in supplying cartels with weapons.
By Adam Liptak
When prosecutors admit they were wrong in a death penalty case, courts should listen.
By Kenneth Cuccinelli
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