The Supreme Court heard arguments in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton on Wednesday, a major First Amendment case.
The Supreme Court weighed whether an explosion in online pornography requires repudiating the court’s precedents concerning sexual content as the justices Wednesday heard arguments in a
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas' wife texted with Trump aides after Biden won the 2020 race. Virginia Thomas urged White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows to challenge the election results.
The case hinges on whether TikTok can convince Justices that such a mandate violates the First Amendment by forcing a foreign-controlled app to sell or shut down. As of Friday, they have not — and the Court has compelled Tik-Tok to be sold or shuttered this weekend.
As has been well-reported, there is a long list of apparent ethical failings by certain members of the court over the last two years — mostly Justice Thomas but also Justices Alito and Sonia Sotomayor.
Judges aren’t politicians and shouldn’t behave like them. When they do, questions about their impartiality naturally arise. Consider two troubling recent cases where other judges unfairly echoed political attacks impugning the integrity of sitting Supreme Court justices.
The Supreme Court decides on and interprets material related to the five core tenets of American political development: identity, ideas, institutions, state capacity and history (Mettler et al,
Joe Biden’s imprint on the federal judiciary goes far beyond his naming of the first Black woman justice to the Supreme Court.
The U.S. Supreme Court will be deciding TikTok's fate. See who will render the decision, and which justice is from Georgia.
The Supreme Court heard a challenge from PornHub and other sites to the Texas law that requires age verification — via government-issued ID or face scan — for certain websites, including porn sites.
Justice Kagan previously rejected a bid to halt misinformation investigations of doctors. Now the full court has rejected the attempt.
A year of widening political divisions ended with the sobering news that confidence in the nation’s judicial system has also taken a hit, dropping to a record low 35 percent,